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1.
New Phytol ; 239(2): 752-765, 2023 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37149890

RESUMO

Soil microbial inoculants are expected to boost crop productivity under climate change and soil degradation. However, the efficiency of native vs commercialized microbial inoculants in soils with different fertility and impacts on resident microbial communities remain unclear. We investigated the differential plant growth responses to native synthetic microbial community (SynCom) and commercial plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR). We quantified the microbial colonization and dynamic of niche structure to emphasize the home-field advantages for native microbial inoculants. A native SynCom of 21 bacterial strains, originating from three typical agricultural soils, conferred a special advantage in promoting maize growth under low-fertility conditions. The root : shoot ratio of fresh weight increased by 78-121% with SynCom but only 23-86% with PGPRs. This phenotype correlated with the potential robust colonization of SynCom and positive interactions with the resident community. Niche breadth analysis revealed that SynCom inoculation induced a neutral disturbance to the niche structure. However, even PGPRs failed to colonize the natural soil, they decreased niche breadth and increased niche overlap by 59.2-62.4%, exacerbating competition. These results suggest that the home-field advantage of native microbes may serve as a basis for engineering crop microbiomes to support food production in widely distributed poor soils.


Assuntos
Inoculantes Agrícolas , Solo , Solo/química , Microbiologia do Solo , Agricultura , Bactérias , Raízes de Plantas/microbiologia , Rizosfera
2.
Huan Jing Ke Xue ; 44(12): 7014-7023, 2023 Dec 08.
Artigo em Chinês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38098424

RESUMO

Fertilizer reduction and efficiency improvement is an important basis for ensuring the safety of the agricultural ecological environment. Microorganisms are the key driving force for regulating the soil nitrogen and phosphorus cycle. Studying the nitrogen and phosphorus transformation function of rhizosphere microorganisms can provide a microbiological regulation approach for further improving the use efficiency of soil nitrogen and phosphorus. Based on the field micro-plot experiments of three typical farmland soils(phaeozem, cambisol, and acrisol), metagenomic sequencing technology was used to study the differences in functional genes and regulatory factors of maize rhizosphere microorganisms during soil nitrogen and phosphorus transformation. The results showed that the functional diversity of maize rhizosphere microorganisms was affected by soil type. The functional diversity of rhizosphere microorganisms in phaeozem and cambisol was mainly affected by water content and nutrient content, and that in acrisol was affected by total phosphorus(TP) and available phosphorus(AP). For soil nitrogen transformation, the gene abundance of related enzymes in the pathway of nitrogen transformation was the highest in the urease gene(ureC) and glucose dehydrogenase gene(gdh), which were 7.25×10-5-12.88×10-5 and 4.47×10-5-7.49×10-5, respectively. The total abundance of assimilatory nitrate reduction functional genes in acrisol was higher than that in phaeozem and cambisol, and the total abundance of functional genes related to other processes was the highest in cambisol. The abundance of functional genes encoding enzymes related to nitrogen metabolism was mainly driven by soil bacterial richness, total potassium(TK), and TP. For soil phosphorus transformation, the number of alkaline phosphatase genes(phoD) catalyzing organic phosphorus mineralization was 1093, and the number of acid phosphatase genes(PHO) was 42. The abundance of phoD was two orders of magnitude higher than that of PHO. In addition, fertilization had no significant effect on the abundance of phoD and PHO in the same soil type. Random forest analysis showed that the abundances of phoD and PHO were significantly affected by soil moisture, organic matter(OM), and total nitrogen(TN), but AP content had the greatest impact on PHO abundance. These results clarified the nitrogen and phosphorus transformation characteristics of maize rhizosphere microorganisms at the functional genomic level and enriched the molecular biological mechanism of the microbial nitrogen and phosphorus transformation function.


Assuntos
Rizosfera , Zea mays , Zea mays/metabolismo , Fósforo/metabolismo , Nitrogênio/análise , Solo , Genômica , Microbiologia do Solo , Fertilizantes/análise
3.
Nat Food ; 4(10): 912-924, 2023 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37783790

RESUMO

Aluminium (Al) toxicity impedes crop growth in acidic soils and is considered the second largest abiotic stress after drought for crops worldwide. Despite remarkable progress in understanding Al resistance in plants, it is still unknown whether and how the soil microbiota confers Al resistance to crops. Here we found that a synthetic community composed of highly Al-resistant bacterial strains isolated from the rice rhizosphere increased rice yield by 26.36% in acidic fields. The synthetic community harvested rhizodeposited carbon for successful proliferation and mitigated soil acidification and Al toxicity through extracellular protonation. The functional coordination between plants and microbes offers a promising way to increase the usage of legacy phosphorus in topsoil. These findings highlight the potential of microbial tools for advancing sustainable agriculture in acidic soils.


Assuntos
Microbiota , Oryza , Solo , Fósforo , Alumínio/toxicidade , Produtos Agrícolas , Ácidos
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