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Soil microbes mediate the effects of nitrogen supply and co-inoculation on Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus in Avena sativa

Authors :
Easterday, Casey A.
Kendig, Amy E.
Seabloom, Eric W.
Borer, Elizabeth T.
Easterday, Casey
Kendig, Amy
Lacroix, Christelle
Seabloom, Eric
Borer, Elizabeth
University of Minnesota [Twin Cities] (UMN)
University of Minnesota System
University of Florida [Gainesville] (UF)
Unité de Pathologie Végétale (PV)
Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)
NSF program in Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases (grant DEB-1015805)
grants from the US National Science Foundation Long-Term Ecological Research Program (LTER) including DEB-1234162 and DEB-1831944
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

SummaryNutrient supply rates to hosts can mediate host–pathogen interactions. In terrestrial systems, nutrient supply to plants is mediated by soil microbes, suggesting a potential indirect effect of soil microbes on plant–pathogen interactions. Soil microbes also may affect plant pathogens by inducing plant defenses.We tested the role of soil microbes, nitrogen supply to plant hosts, and co-inoculation on infection by aphid-vectored RNA viruses, Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus (BYDV-PAV) and Cereal Yellow Dwarf Virus (CYDV-RPV), in a grass host grown in soil microbes collected from a long-term nitrogen enrichment experiment.BYDV-PAV incidence declined with high nitrogen supply, co-inoculation, or presence of soil microbes exposed to long-term low nitrogen enrichment. However, when combined, the negative effects of these treatments were sub-additive: nitrogen and co-inoculation did not reduce BYDV-PAV incidence in plants grown with the soil microbes. While soil microbes impacted leaf chlorophyll, they did not alter biomass or CYDV-RPV incidence.Soil microbes mediated the effects of nitrogen supply and co-inoculation on infection incidence and the effects of infection on host symptoms. Thus, soil microbial communities can indirectly control disease dynamics, altering the effects of nitrogen enrichment on plant–pathogen and pathogen–pathogen interactions in terrestrial systems.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e5291b3d145f3513083e45aa583c6ae5