Department of Life Sciences, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi, TX 78412, USA
School of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 Nov 19;374(1763):20170395. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0395.
Herbarium specimens represent important records of morphological and genetic diversity of plants that inform questions relevant to global change, including species distributions, phenology and functional traits. It is increasingly appreciated that plant microbiomes can influence these aspects of plant biology, but little is known regarding the historic distribution of microbes associated with plants collected in the pre-molecular age. If microbiomes can be observed reliably in herbarium specimens, researchers will gain a new lens with which to examine microbial ecology, evolution, species interactions. Here, we describe a method for accessing historical plant microbiomes from preserved herbarium specimens, providing a proof of concept using two plant taxa from the imperiled boreal biome ( and subsp Ericaceae). We focus on fungal endophytes, which occur within symptomless plant tissues such as leaves. Through a three-part approach (i.e. culturing, cloning and next-generation amplicon sequencing via the Illumina MiSeq platform, with extensive controls), we examined endophyte communities in dried, pressed leaves that had been processed as regular herbarium specimens and stored at room temperature in a herbarium for four years We retrieved only one endophyte in culture, but cloning and especially the MiSeq analysis revealed a rich community of foliar endophytes. The phylogenetic distribution and diversity of endophyte assemblages, especially among the Ascomycota, resemble endophyte communities from fresh plants collected in the boreal biome. We could distinguish communities of endophytes in each plant species and differentiate likely endophytes from fungi that could be surface contaminants. Taxa found by cloning were observed in the larger MiSeq dataset, but species richness was greater when subsets of the same tissues were evaluated with the MiSeq approach. Our findings provide a proof of concept for capturing endophyte DNA from herbarium specimens, supporting the importance of herbarium records as roadmaps for understanding the dynamics of plant-associated microbial biodiversity in the Anthropocene.This article is part of the theme issue 'Biological collections for understanding biodiversity in the Anthropocene'.
标本馆标本代表了植物形态和遗传多样性的重要记录,这些记录可以为与全球变化相关的问题提供信息,包括物种分布、物候和功能特征。人们越来越认识到植物微生物组可以影响植物生物学的这些方面,但对于与在分子时代之前收集的植物相关的微生物的历史分布知之甚少。如果可以在标本馆标本中可靠地观察到微生物组,研究人员将获得一个新的视角来研究微生物生态学、进化和物种相互作用。在这里,我们描述了一种从保存的标本馆标本中获取历史植物微生物组的方法,并用来自受威胁的北方生物群落的两个植物类群(和 亚种 Ericaceae)提供了概念验证。我们专注于内生真菌,它们存在于无症状的植物组织中,如叶片。通过三部分方法(即培养、克隆和通过 Illumina MiSeq 平台进行下一代扩增子测序,并进行广泛的对照),我们研究了已加工为常规标本馆标本并在标本馆中以室温储存四年的干燥、压制叶片中的内生菌群落。我们仅在培养物中回收了一个内生菌,但克隆,尤其是 MiSeq 分析揭示了丰富的叶片内生菌群落。内生菌组合的系统发育分布和多样性,特别是在子囊菌门中,与北方生物群落中新鲜植物收集的内生菌群落相似。我们可以区分每个植物物种中的内生菌群落,并区分可能的内生菌与可能是表面污染物的真菌。通过克隆发现的分类群在更大的 MiSeq 数据集观察到,但当使用 MiSeq 方法评估相同组织的子集时,物种丰富度更高。我们的研究结果为从标本馆标本中捕获内生菌 DNA 提供了概念验证,支持了标本馆记录作为理解人类世植物相关微生物生物多样性动态的路线图的重要性。本文是主题为“生物标本馆收集在人类世理解生物多样性中的作用”的一部分。