A1 Vertaisarvioitu alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä lehdessä

Predator-driven microbial feedback loops promote plant health




TekijätLi, Gen; Liu, Ting; Chuai, Huiyu; Ma, Huiping; Yang, Zihan; Xu, Yangchu; Li, Huixin; Shen, Qirong; Hu, Feng; Geisen, Stefan; Jousset, Alexandre; Wei, Zhong; Hogle, Shane

Julkaisuvuosi2026

Lehti: Nature Communications

eISSN2041-1723

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-70413-3

Julkaisun avoimuus kirjaamishetkelläAvoimesti saatavilla

Julkaisukanavan avoimuus Kokonaan avoin julkaisukanava

Verkko-osoitehttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-70413-3


Tiivistelmä

Top-down trophic interactions are major drivers of microbiome dynamics, yet their outcomes are difficult to predict and their consequences for pathogen control remain unclear. We combine synthetic bacterial communities of varying complexity with field studies and microcosm assays to test whether microbivorous nematodes reorganize microbiomes to suppress soilborne disease. Field studies show stronger nematode-microbe associations around healthy plants, and microcosm assays confirm that nematode presence produces stable suppression, whereas microbe-only communities collapse under pathogen invasion. Nematode predation depletes non-preferred bacterial taxa and enriches metabolically versatile taxa within Proteobacteria, increasing community-level antagonistic potential and promoting complementary resource-use interactions linked to pathogen inhibition, yielding suppression beyond individual or pairwise effects. A minimal four-component feedback loop linking a nematode predator, plant pathogens, and two plant-associated bacteria with complementary functions accounts for the emergent outcome. Together, these results reveal an animal-mediated pathway of microbiome assembly that enhances resistance to pathogen invasion and provide a trophically informed framework for designing stable, disease-suppressive microbiomes in agriculture.


Julkaisussa olevat rahoitustiedot
This work was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42577332 to G.L. and 32522068 to T.L.), National Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province, China (BK20250195 to T.L.), China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2024M761143 and 2025T180695 to G.L.), Postdoctoral Fellowship Program of CPSF (GZC20251618 to G.L.), Jiangsu Funding Program for Excellent Postdoctoral Talent (2025ZB654 to G.L.) and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (KYQN2023048 to G.L.). A.J. was supported by the grant National Natural Science Foundation of China W2431030.


Last updated on