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Ancient microbiomes as mirrored by DNA extracted from century-old herbarium plants and associated soil
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  • Gianluca GRASSO,
  • Régis Debruyne,
  • Martino Adamo,
  • Olivier Rué,
  • Franck Lejzerowicz,
  • Lucie Bittner,
  • Valeria Bianciotto,
  • Roland Marmeisse
Gianluca GRASSO
University of Turin

Corresponding Author:gianluca.grasso@unito.it

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Régis Debruyne
Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle
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Martino Adamo
University of Turin
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Olivier Rué
Université Paris-Saclay
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Franck Lejzerowicz
University of Oslo
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Lucie Bittner
MNHN
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Valeria Bianciotto
Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection National Research Council
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Roland Marmeisse
MNHN
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Abstract

Numerous specimens stored in natural history collections have been involuntarily preserved together with their associated microbiomes. We propose exploiting centuries-old soils occasionally found on the roots of herbarium plants to assess the diversity of ancient soil microbial communities originally associated with these plants. We validated this approach extracting and sequencing DNA from rhizospheric soils and roots of four plant species preserved in herbaria for more than 120 years. Extracted DNA displayed typical features of ancient DNA, with cytosine deamination at the ends of fragments predominantly shorter than 50 bp. When compared to extant microbiomes, herbarium microbial communities clustered with soil communities and were distinct from communities from other environments. Herbarium communities also displayed biodiversity features and assembly rules typical of soil and plant-associated ones. Soil communities were richer than root-associated ones with which they shared most taxa. Regarding community turnover, we detected collection site, soil versus root, and also plant species effects. Eukaryotic taxa that displayed a higher abundance in roots were mostly plant pathogens or obligate symbionts that were not identified among soil-enriched ones. Conservation of these biodiversity features and assembly rules in herbarium-associated microbial communities indicates that herbarium-extracted DNA could reflect the composition of the original plant-associated microbial communities and that preservation in herbaria seemingly did not alter these characteristics. Through the use of this approach, it should be possible to investigate historical soils and herbarium plant roots to explore the diversity and temporal dynamics of soil microbial communities.
21 Aug 2024Submitted to Molecular Ecology Resources
22 Aug 2024Submission Checks Completed
22 Aug 2024Assigned to Editor
22 Aug 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
13 Sep 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned