Dong Menghui, Kuramae Eiko E, Zhao Mengli, Li Rong, Shen Qirong, Kowalchuk George A
Key Lab of Organic-Based Fertilizers of China, Jiangsu Provincial Key Lab for Solid Organic Waste Utilization, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center of Solid Organic Wastes, Educational Ministry Engineering Center of Resource-Saving Fertilizers, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing, 210095, Jiangsu, China.
Ecology and Biodiversity Group, Department of Biology, Institute of Environmental Biology, Utrecht University, 3584 CH, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
ISME Commun. 2023 Sep 26;3(1):104. doi: 10.1038/s43705-023-00312-x.
Soil aggregates contain distinct physio-chemical properties across different size classes. These differences in micro-habitats support varied microbial communities and modulate the effect of plant on microbiome, which affect soil functions such as disease suppression. However, little is known about how the residents of different soil aggregate size classes are impacted by plants throughout their growth stages. Here, we examined how tomato plants impact soil aggregation and bacterial communities within different soil aggregate size classes. Moreover, we investigated whether aggregate size impacts the distribution of soil pathogen and their potential inhibitors. We collected samples from different tomato growth stages: before-planting, seedling, flowering, and fruiting stage. We measured bacterial density, community composition, and pathogen abundance using qPCR and 16 S rRNA gene sequencing. We found the development of tomato growth stages negatively impacted root-adhering soil aggregation, with a gradual decrease of large macro-aggregates (1-2 mm) and an increase of micro-aggregates (<0.25 mm). Additionally, changes in bacterial density and community composition varied across soil aggregate size classes. Furthermore, the pathogen exhibited a preference to micro-aggregates, while macro-aggregates hold a higher abundance of potential pathogen-inhibiting taxa and predicted antibiotic-associated genes. Our results indicate that the impacts of tomatoes on soil differ for different soil aggregate size classes throughout different plant growth stages, and plant pathogens and their potential inhibitors have different habitats within soil aggregate size classes. These findings highlight the importance of fine-scale heterogeneity of soil aggregate size classes in research on microbial ecology and agricultural sustainability, further research focuses on soil aggregates level could help identify candidate tax involved in suppressing pathogens in the virtual micro-habitats.
土壤团聚体在不同粒径级别中具有不同的物理化学性质。这些微生境的差异支持了多样的微生物群落,并调节了植物对微生物组的影响,进而影响诸如病害抑制等土壤功能。然而,对于不同粒径级别的土壤团聚体中的微生物在植物整个生长阶段如何受到影响,我们知之甚少。在此,我们研究了番茄植株如何影响不同粒径级别的土壤团聚体和细菌群落。此外,我们还调查了团聚体大小是否会影响土壤病原体及其潜在抑制剂的分布。我们从番茄的不同生长阶段采集样本:种植前、幼苗期、开花期和结果期。我们使用定量聚合酶链反应(qPCR)和16S rRNA基因测序来测量细菌密度、群落组成和病原体丰度。我们发现番茄生长阶段的发展对根际附着土壤团聚体产生了负面影响,大团聚体(1 - 2毫米)逐渐减少,而微团聚体(<0.25毫米)增加。此外,细菌密度和群落组成的变化在不同粒径级别的土壤团聚体中各不相同。此外,病原体表现出对微团聚体的偏好,而大团聚体中潜在的病原体抑制类群和预测的抗生素相关基因的丰度更高。我们的结果表明,在不同的植物生长阶段,番茄对不同粒径级别的土壤的影响存在差异,并且植物病原体及其潜在抑制剂在土壤团聚体粒径级别中具有不同的栖息地。这些发现凸显了土壤团聚体粒径级别的精细尺度异质性在微生物生态学和农业可持续性研究中的重要性,进一步聚焦于土壤团聚体层面的研究有助于识别在虚拟微生境中参与抑制病原体的候选类群。