The Bacterial Community of the Foliose Macro-lichen Peltigera frigida Is More than a Mere Extension of the Microbiota of the Subjacent Substrate
Autor: | Fernando Fernández-Mendoza, Diego Leiva, Julieta Orlando, José Acevedo, Margarita Carú, Martin Grube |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Cyanobacteria integumentary system Ecology biology Peltigera 030106 microbiology Soil Science Bacteroidetes biology.organism_classification stomatognathic diseases 03 medical and health sciences 030104 developmental biology stomatognathic system Propagule Microbial ecology Botany Proteobacteria skin and connective tissue diseases Lichen Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Acidobacteria |
Zdroj: | Microbial Ecology. 81:965-976 |
ISSN: | 1432-184X 0095-3628 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00248-020-01662-y |
Popis: | Lichens host highly diverse microbial communities, with bacteria being one of the most explored groups in terms of their diversity and functioning. These bacteria could partly originate from symbiotic propagules developed by many lichens and, perhaps more commonly and depending on environmental conditions, from different sources of the surroundings. Using the narrowly distributed species Peltigera frigida as an object of study, we propose that bacterial communities in these lichens are different from those in their subjacent substrates, even if some taxa might be shared. Ten terricolous P. frigida lichens and their substrates were sampled from forested sites in the Coyhaique National Reserve, located in an understudied region in Chile. The mycobiont identity was confirmed using partial 28S and ITS sequences. Besides, 16S fragments revealed that mycobionts were associated with the same cyanobacterial haplotype. From both lichens and substrates, Illumina 16S amplicon sequencing was performed using primers that exclude cyanobacteria. In lichens, Proteobacteria was the most abundant phylum (37%), whereas soil substrates were dominated by Acidobacteriota (39%). At lower taxonomic levels, several bacterial groups differed in relative abundance among P. frigida lichens and their substrates, some of them being highly abundant in lichens but almost absent in substrates, like Sphingomonas (8% vs 0.2%), and others enriched in lichens, as an unassigned genus of Chitinophagaceae (10% vs 2%). These results reinforce the idea that lichens would carry some components of their microbiome when propagating, but they also could acquire part of their bacterial community from the substrates. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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