Comparison of the Peel-Associated Epiphytic Bacteria of Anthocyanin-Rich “Sun Black” and Wild-Type Tomatoes under Organic and Conventional Farming
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Materia
Solanum lycopersicum L. Tomato Purple tomato Anthocyanin-rich tomato Sun black tomato Organic farming Conventional farming Bacterial communities Epiphytic bacteria Amplicon sequencing
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2022-11-12Referencia bibliográfica
Gorrasi, S... [et al.]. Comparison of the Peel-Associated Epiphytic Bacteria of Anthocyanin-Rich “Sun Black” and Wild-Type Tomatoes under Organic and Conventional Farming. Microorganisms 2022, 10, 2240. [https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10112240]
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Filas project MIGLIORAResumen
Tomatoes are among the most consumed vegetables worldwide and represent a source of
health-beneficial substances. Our study represents the first investigating the peel-associated epiphytic
bacteria of red and purple (anthocyanin-rich) tomatoes subjected to organic and conventional farming
systems. Proteobacteria was the dominant phylum (relative abundances 79–91%) in all experimental
conditions. Enterobacteriaceae represented a large fraction (39.3–47.5%) of the communities, with
Buttiauxella and Atlantibacter as the most represented genera. The core microbiota was composed of
59 operational taxonomic units (OTUs), including the majority of the most abundant ones. The occurrence
of the most abundant OTUs differed among the experimental conditions. OTU 1 (Buttiauxella),
OTU 2 (Enterobacteriales), and OTU 6 (Bacillales) were higher in red and purple tomatoes grown
under organic farming. OTU 5 (Acinetobacter) had the highest abundance in red tomatoes subjected
to organic farming. OTU 3 (Atlantibacter) was among the major OTUs in red tomatoes under both
farming conditions. OTU 7 (Clavibacter) and OTU 8 (Enterobacteriaceae) had abundances 1% only
in red tomatoes grown under conventional farming. PCA and clustering analysis highlighted a
high similarity between the bacterial communities of red and purple tomatoes grown under organic
farming. Furthermore, the bacterial communities of purple tomatoes grown under organic farming
showed the lowest diversity and evenness. This work paves the way to understand the role of
nutritional superior tomato genotypes, combined with organic farming, to modulate the presence of
beneficial/harmful bacteria and supply healthier foods within a sustainable agriculture.
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