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AuthorYaish, Mahmoud W
AuthorAl-Busaidi, Aya
AuthorGlick, Bernard R
AuthorAhmed, Talaat
AuthorAlatalo, Juha M
Available date2024-04-28T06:27:10Z
Publication Date2024-03-15
Publication NameBiology
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology13030190
CitationYaish, M.W.; Al-Busaidi, A.; Glick, B.R.; Ahmed, T.; Alatalo, J.M. The Effects of Salinity and Genotype on the Rhizospheric Mycobiomes in Date Palm Seedlings. Biology 2024, 13, 190. https://doi.org/10.3390/biology13030190
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/54289
AbstractSalinity severely affects the health and productivity of plants, with root-associated microbes, including fungi, potentially playing a crucial role in mitigating this effect and promoting plant health. This study employed metagenomics to investigate differences in the structures of the epiphyte mycobiomes in the rhizospheres of seedlings of two distinct date palm cultivars with contrasting salinity tolerances, the susceptible cultivar, 'Zabad', and the tolerant cultivar, 'Umsila'. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rRNA was utilized as a DNA barcoding tool. The sequencing of 12 mycobiome libraries yielded 905,198 raw sequences of 268,829 high-quality reads that coded for 135 unique and annotatable operational taxonomic units (OTUs). An OTU analysis revealed differences in the rhizofungal community structures between the treatments regardless of genotype, and non-metric dimensional scaling (N-MDS) analyses demonstrated distinct separations between the cultivars under saline stress. However, these differences were not detected under the control environmental conditions, i.e., no salinity. The rhizospheric fungal community included four phyla (Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, Chytridiomycota, and Mucoromycota), with differences in the abundances of , , and genera in response to salinity, regardless of the genotype. Differential pairwise comparisons showed that and increased in abundance under saline conditions, providing potential future in vitro isolation guidelines for plant growth-promoting fungi. This study highlights the intricate dynamics of the rhizosphere microbial communities in date palms and their responses to salt stress. Additionally, we found no support for the hypothesis that indigenous epiphytic fungal communities are significantly involved in salinity tolerance in date palms.
SponsorThe authors thank Sultan Qaboos University for their generous internal funding (number IG/SCI/BIOL/24/03) to MWY.
Languageen
PublisherMDPI
SubjectNGS
PGPB
cultivars
date palm
mycobiomes
rhizofungus
salinity
TitleThe Effects of Salinity and Genotype on the Rhizospheric Mycobiomes in Date Palm Seedlings.
TypeArticle
Issue Number3
Volume Number13
ESSN2079-7737
dc.accessType Open Access


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