Department of Plant Biotechnology and Bioinformatics, Ghent University, 9052, Ghent, Belgium.
Center for Plant Systems Biology, VIB, 9052, Ghent, Belgium.
Microbiome. 2020 Apr 18;8(1):54. doi: 10.1186/s40168-020-00833-w.
When maize (Zea mays L.) is grown in the Northern hemisphere, its development is heavily arrested by chilling temperatures, especially at the juvenile phase. As some endophytes are beneficial for plants under stress conditions, we analyzed the impact of chilling temperatures on the root microbiome and examined whether microbiome-based analysis might help to identify bacterial strains that could promote growth under these temperatures.
We investigated how the maize root microbiome composition changed by means of 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing when maize was grown at chilling temperatures in comparison to ambient temperatures by repeatedly cultivating maize in field soil. We identified 12 abundant and enriched bacterial families that colonize maize roots, consisting of bacteria recruited from the soil, whereas seed-derived endophytes were lowly represented. Chilling temperatures modified the root microbiome composition only slightly, but significantly. An enrichment of several chilling-responsive families was detected, of which the Comamonadaceae and the Pseudomonadaceae were the most abundant in the root endosphere of maize grown under chilling conditions, whereas only three were strongly depleted, among which the Streptomycetaceae. Additionally, a collection of bacterial strains isolated from maize roots was established and a selection was screened for growth-promoting effects on juvenile maize grown under chilling temperatures. Two promising strains that promoted maize growth under chilling conditions were identified that belonged to the root endophytic bacterial families, from which the relative abundance remained unchanged by variations in the growth temperature.
Our analyses indicate that chilling temperatures affect the bacterial community composition within the maize root endosphere. We further identified two bacterial strains that boost maize growth under chilling conditions. Their identity revealed that analyzing the chilling-responsive families did not help for their identification. As both strains belong to root endosphere enriched families, visualizing and comparing the bacterial diversity in these communities might still help to identify new PGPR strains. Additionally, a strain does not necessarely need to belong to a high abundant family in the root endosphere to provoke a growth-promoting effect in chilling conditions. Video abstract.
当玉米(Zea mays L.)在北半球生长时,其发育会受到低温的严重抑制,尤其是在幼年期。由于一些内生菌在胁迫条件下对植物有益,我们分析了低温对根微生物组的影响,并研究了基于微生物组的分析是否有助于鉴定能够在这些温度下促进生长的细菌菌株。
我们通过在田间土壤中反复种植玉米,利用 16S rRNA 基因扩增子测序来研究玉米在凉爽温度下生长时,其根系微生物组组成如何发生变化,与在环境温度下生长时进行比较。我们确定了 12 个丰富且富集的细菌家族,这些家族定植于玉米根中,来源于土壤中的细菌,而种子衍生的内生菌则代表较少。低温仅略微但显著地改变了根系微生物组的组成。检测到几个对低温有反应的家族的富集,其中根内区的 Comamonadaceae 和 Pseudomonadaceae 是在低温下生长的玉米中最丰富的,而只有三个家族被强烈耗尽,其中包括 Streptomycetaceae。此外,还建立了从玉米根中分离的细菌菌株集合,并筛选了对在低温下生长的幼年期玉米具有生长促进作用的菌株。鉴定出了两种在低温条件下促进玉米生长的有前途的菌株,它们属于根内生细菌家族,其相对丰度不受生长温度变化的影响。
我们的分析表明,低温会影响玉米根内区的细菌群落组成。我们进一步鉴定了两种在低温条件下促进玉米生长的细菌菌株。它们的身份表明,分析低温响应家族并不能帮助识别它们。由于这两种菌株都属于根内区丰富的家族,可视化和比较这些群落中的细菌多样性可能仍然有助于鉴定新的 PGPR 菌株。此外,在低温条件下引发生长促进作用的菌株不一定需要属于根内区的高丰度家族。