Fig. 4From: Disease-induced changes in plant microbiome assembly and functional adaptationInterkingdom co-occurrence networks. a Networks contained both bacterial and fungal taxa showing a higher number of fungal taxa (orange) and a lower number of bacterial taxa (blue) in the diseased network than those in the healthy network. The networks in the soil, root, stem (upper, middle, and bottom), and fruit are presented in Fig. S12. b Comparison of node-level topological features in Fig. 4a (degree and closeness centrality) demonstrating the high degree and closeness centrality values for the hub taxa. Taxonomic information of the hub taxa is presented in Table S12. c Degree values of bacterial and fungal taxa in healthy and diseased networks. The significance of difference was determined by nonparametric Kruskal–Wallis test. d Number of bacterial–bacterial (BB), bacterial–fungal (BF), and fungal–fungal (FF) correlations in the healthy and diseased networks. Green and red colors of the edges and column indicate positive and negative correlations, respectively. e Degree and interaction type of the top 10 hub nodes in healthy (left) and diseased (right) networks. “Intra-kingdom correlation” refers to BB or FF, and “interkingdom correlation” refers to BFBack to article page