Green Stefan J, Michel Frederick C, Hadar Yitzhak, Minz Dror
Faculty of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Quality Sciences, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot, Israel.
ISME J. 2007 Aug;1(4):291-9. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2007.33. Epub 2007 May 24.
Microbial colonization of plant seeds and roots is a highly complex process in which soil and plant type can influence the composition of the root-associated and rhizosphere microbial communities. Amendment of compost, a common agricultural technique, introduces exogenous nutrients and microorganisms to the soil-plant environment, and can further influence microbial community composition in the plant environment. Although compost amendments can strongly influence soil and rhizosphere microbial communities, there is evidence that with increasing proximity to the root, plant influences predominate over soil effects. We hypothesized that the 'rhizosphere effect' observed with proximity to plant surfaces does not act equally on all microorganisms. To explore this issue, we examined two bacterial taxa that reproducibly colonized seed and root surfaces in an experiment examining the influence of compost amendment on plant-associated bacterial communities. Population-specific analyses revealed striking differences in the ecology of bacteria from the genus Chryseobacterium and the family Oxalobacteraceae in potting mix and plant-associated environments. Seed- and root-colonizing Oxalobacteraceae populations were highly sensitive to plant effects, and phylogenetic analyses of root-colonizing Oxalobacteraceae revealed the presence of root-associated populations that were highly similar, regardless of treatment, and differed from the potting mix populations detected at the same sampling points. Conversely, Chryseobacterium community composition was found to be essentially invariant within treatments, but was strongly influenced by compost amendment. This persistence and stable nature of the Chryseobacterium community composition demonstrates that rhizosphere selection is not the exclusive factor involved in determining the composition of the cucumber spermosphere and rhizosphere communities.
植物种子和根部的微生物定殖是一个高度复杂的过程,其中土壤和植物类型会影响与根相关的和根际微生物群落的组成。堆肥改良作为一种常见的农业技术,将外源养分和微生物引入土壤-植物环境,并能进一步影响植物环境中的微生物群落组成。尽管堆肥改良能强烈影响土壤和根际微生物群落,但有证据表明,随着与根部距离的缩短,植物的影响超过了土壤的影响。我们推测,在靠近植物表面时观察到的“根际效应”对所有微生物的作用并不相同。为了探究这个问题,我们在一项研究堆肥改良对植物相关细菌群落影响的实验中,研究了两种可重复性地定殖在种子和根部表面的细菌类群。针对特定种群的分析揭示了金黄杆菌属和草酸杆菌科细菌在盆栽基质和植物相关环境中的生态学存在显著差异。定殖在种子和根部的草酸杆菌科种群对植物效应高度敏感,对定殖在根部的草酸杆菌科进行系统发育分析发现,无论处理如何,都存在高度相似的与根相关的种群,且这些种群与在相同采样点检测到的盆栽基质种群不同。相反,发现金黄杆菌群落在处理内基本不变,但受堆肥改良的强烈影响。金黄杆菌群落组成的这种持久性和稳定性表明,根际选择并非决定黄瓜精子球和根际群落组成的唯一因素。