| Literature DB >> 29995910 |
Yang Zhang1,2, Fu-Sheng Chen2, Xiao-Qin Wu1, Feng-Gang Luan2, Lin-Ping Zhang2, Xiang-Min Fang2, Song-Ze Wan2, Xiao-Fei Hu3, Jian-Ren Ye1.
Abstract
Phosphate-solubilizing fungi (PSF) generally enhance available phosphorus (P) released from soil, which contributes to plants' P requirement, especially in P-limiting regions. In this study, two PSF, TalA-JX04 and AspN-JX16, were isolated from the rhizosphere soil of moso bamboo (Phyllostachys edulis) widely distributed in P-deficient areas in China and identified as Talaromyces aurantiacus and Aspergillus neoniger, respectively. The two PSF were cultured in potato dextrose liquid medium with six types of initial pH values ranging from 6.5 to 1.5 to assess acid resistance. Both PSF were incubated in Pikovskaya's liquid media with different pH values containing five recalcitrant P sources, including Ca3(PO4)2, FePO4, CaHPO4, AlPO4, and C6H6Ca6O24P6, to estimate their P-solubilizing capacity. No significant differences were found in the biomass of both fungi grown in media with different initial pH, indicating that these fungi could grow well under acid stress. The P-solubilizing capacity of TalA-JX04 was highest in medium containing CaHPO4, followed by Ca3(PO4)2, FePO4, C6H6Ca6O24P6, and AlPO4 in six types of initial pH treatments, while the recalcitrant P-solubilizing capacity of AspN-JX16 varied with initial pH. Meanwhile, the P-solubilizing capacity of AspN-JX16 was much higher than TalA-JX04. The pH of fermentation broth was negatively correlated with P-solubilizing capacity (p<0.01), suggesting that the fungi promote the dissolution of P sources by secreting organic acids. Our results showed that TalA-JX04 and AspN-JX16 could survive in acidic environments and both fungi had a considerable ability to release soluble P by decomposing recalcitrant P-bearing compounds. The two fungi had potential for application as environment-friendly biofertilizers in subtropical bamboo ecosystem.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29995910 PMCID: PMC6040707 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Basic parameters and soil characteristics of the three sampling sites.
| Sampling sites | Longitude | Latitude | Elevation (m) | pH | Total N (g·kg-1) | Total P |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dagang | 114°56'31"E | 28°37'17"N | 381.0 | 5.16±0.09a | 4.65±0.10a | 0.27±0.03b |
| Guanshan | 114°34'47"E | 28°33'35"N | 548.0 | 4.37±0.07b | 2.51±0.09c | 0.33±0.04b |
| Dajing | 114°8'19"E | 26°34'8"N | 1105.0 | 4.39±0.06b | 3.44±0.08b | 0.54±0.07a |
Notes: Value = Mean ± standard error. n = 5. The different letters indicated the significant differences among the three sampling sites at the level of p<0.05.
Strains with their GenBank accession numbers for three genetic markers.
| Strains | Genetic markers | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| ITS | |||
| TalA-JX04 | MF440335 | MF163992 | MF375217 |
| AspN-JX16 | MF440336 | MF163993 | MF375216 |
Fig 1Zones of phosphate solubilization on Pikovskaya’ s agar plates produced by TalA-JX04 (A) and AspN-JX16 (B) incubated at 25°C.
Fig 2Talaromyces aurantiacus (TalA-JX04): Colonies on CYA at 25°C after 7 days (A), Conidiophores, phialides and conidia (B–D); Conidia (E); Aspergillus neoniger (AspN-JX16): Colonies on CYA at 25°C after 7 days (F), Head of conidiophore, phialides, and conidia (G); Double spore production cells (H); Conidia (I). Scale bars = 5 μm.
Fig 3Phylogenetic tree of the CaM sequence of TalA-JX04 (A) and AspN-JX16 (B). The NJ phylogram was inferred from partial CaM sequence data. Bootstrap percentages of >70% derived from 1000 replicates are indicated at the nodes. Bar = 0.02 substitutions per nucleotide position.
The mycelial biomass and pH after incubation of TalA-JX04 and AspN-JX16 in the liquid medium under various initial pH.
| Initial pH | Mycelial biomass (g L-1) | Fermentation broth pH | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TalA-JX04 | AspN-JX16 | TalA-JX04 | AspN-JX16 | |
| 1.5 | 21.42±1.43a | 17.46±0.36ab | 3.40±0.04c* | 3.02±0.09c |
| 2.5 | 20.31±0.55a | 18.33±1.81ab | 3.66±0.09b* | 3.18±0.06b |
| 3.5 | 20.55±2.31a | 18.77±1.81a | 3.71±0.07b* | 3.24±0.08b |
| 4.5 | 22.05±2.32a | 17.65±2.25ab | 3.71±0.06b* | 3.25±0.07b |
| 5.5 | 22.13±4.42a | 16.64±1.42ab | 3.88±0.04a* | 3.38±0.06a |
| 6.5 | 22.88±3.71a | 16.09±0.87b | 3.95±0.11a* | 3.40±0.03a |
Note: Value = Mean ± standard error. Different letters indicated significant differences (p<0.05) among the pH in the same strain. The asterisk (*) indicated the significant difference (p<0.05) between TalA-JX04 and AspN-JX16 with the same pH.
The F-values of ANOVA for the effects of initial pH and P sources on phosphate-solubilizing capacity and pH after incubation of TalA-JX04 and AspN-JX16.
| Factors | TalA-JX04 | AspN-JX16 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PSC | Liquid pH | PSC | Liquid pH | |
| Initial pH | 4.33 | 1.88 | 91.05 | 6.09 |
| P sources | 467.13 | 325.58 | 370.19 | 1090.71 |
| Initial pH×P sources | 2.98 | 5.53 | 105.33 | 4.81 |
Note: PSC = Phosphate-solubilizing capacity
NS p>0.05
** p<0.01
*** p<0.001.
Fig 4The solubilizing capacity of five P sources under different initial pH of TalA-JX04 (A) and AspN-JX16 (B). Note: Value = Mean ± standard error. The uppercase indicated the differences (p <0.05) among the five P sources within same initial pH and the lowercase indicated the differences (p <0.05) among the initial pH within the same P sources.
Fig 5The Pearson’s correlations between the pH of the fermentation broth and P-solubilizing capacity of TalA-JX04 (A) and AspN-JX16 (B).