| Literature DB >> 31632375 |
Zhiyuan Gao1,2, Meikun Han1,2, Yaya Hu1,2, Ziqian Li1,2, Chaofang Liu1,2, Xue Wang3, Qing Tian1,2, Weijing Jiao1,2, Jianmin Hu1,2, Lanfu Liu1,2, Zhengjun Guan4, Zhimin Ma1,2.
Abstract
Soil microorganisms play an important role in the ecosystem, and have a certain relationship with the continuous cropping obstacles, which are common with sweet potato. However, there are few reports on the effects of continuous cropping of sweet potato on the microbial community structure in the rhizospheric soil. Here, we investigated the effects of continuous cropping of sweet potato on the fungal community structure in rhizospheric soil, in order to provide theoretical basis for prevention and control of continuous cropping obstacles. This study used X18 and Y138 varieties as experimental materials. Soil samples were collected during the early period of planting and harvest in two consecutive years, and fungi were analyzed using Illumina Miseq. Results showed that the fungi diversity and richness in rhizospheric soil of X18 and Y138 were significantly increased after continuous cropping; the most dominant fungi phylum was Ascomycota, which decreased significantly after continuous cropping. In addition, the content of beneficial fungi such as Chaetomium was reduced, while that of harmful fungi such as Verticillium, Fusarium, and Colletotrichum were increased. The composition of X18 and Y138 fungal community in the same sampling period after continuous cropping was similar, although that of the same sweet potato variety significantly differed with the sampling period. Overall, our results indicate that continuous cropping alters the fungal community structure of the sweet potato rhizospheric soil, such that the content of beneficial fungi decrease, while that of harmful fungi increase, thereby increasing soil-borne diseases and reducing the yield and quality of sweet potato. Furthermore, these effects are different for different sweet potato varieties. Thus, during actual production, attention should be paid to maintain the stability of sweet potato rhizospheric soil micro-ecology through rotation or application of microbial fertilizers and soil amendments to alleviate continuous cropping obstacles.Entities:
Keywords: Illumina Miseq method; community structure; continuous cropping; fungal; rhizospheric soil; sweet potato
Year: 2019 PMID: 31632375 PMCID: PMC6783561 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2019.02269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
MiSeq sequencing results and α-diversity index of sweetpotato rhizospheric soil samples.
| Sample ID | Reads | 0.97 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OTU | Ace | Chao | Coverage | Shannon | ||
| X18-1 | 35,742 | 413 | 771 (701, 858) | 643 (564, 763) | 0.995495 | 3.12 (3.1, 3.14) |
| X18-2 | 20,955 | 358 | 600 (547, 669) | 547 (477, 659) | 0.993749 | 3.2 (3.17, 3.22) |
| X18-3 | 32,317 | 513 | 1,087 (991, 1,201) | 899 (779, 1,072) | 0.993161 | 3.11 (3.08, 3.13) |
| X18-4 | 33,117 | 642 | 1,400 (1,289, 1,530) | 1,132 (993, 1,325) | 0.991636 | 3.77 (3.75, 3.79) |
| Y138-1 | 37,849 | 392 | 729 (660, 816) | 641 (555, 774) | 0.995773 | 2.86 (2.84, 2.88) |
| Y138-2 | 21,328 | 314 | 450 (406, 515) | 476 (413, 581) | 0.994702 | 3 (2.97, 3.02) |
| Y138-3 | 33,351 | 462 | 878 (802, 971) | 788 (680, 948) | 0.994363 | 2.88 (2.86, 2.9) |
| Y138-4 | 32,619 | 611 | 1,415 (1,298, 1,553) | 1,083 (948, 1,271) | 0.991723 | 3.75 (3.73, 3.77) |
X18, Xushu 18; Y138, Yizi 138; 1 and 2 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2015, 3 and 4 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2016, respectively; Reads: the optimized sequences; OTU, operational taxonomic unit. The numbers within parentheses are the lower and upper limits in statistics of the corresponding data, respectively.
Figure 1Rarefaction curves for all soil samples. X18, Xushu 18; Y138, Yizi 138; 1 and 2 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2015, 3 and 4 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2016, respectively.
Figure 2Relative abundance of the fungal phyla (A) and genera (B) in the rhizospheric soil of continuous cropping sweet potato X18 and Y138; X18, Xushu 18; Y138, Yizi 138; 1 and 2 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2015, 3 and 4 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2016, respectively.
Figure 3Microbial community heatmap analysis of the fungal phyla detected across all samples. X18, Xushu 18; Y138, Yizi 138; 1 and 2 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2015, 3 and 4 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2016, respectively. The relative values for fungal phyla are indicated by color intensity with the legend at the bottom of the picture.
Figure 4Venn analysis of the number of common and unique operational taxonomic unit (OTU). X18, Xushu 18; Y138, Yizi 138; 1 and 2 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2015, 3 and 4 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2016, respectively.
Figure 5Principal coordinate analysis of operational taxonomic units. X18, Xushu 18; Y138, Yizi 138; 1 and 2 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2015, 3 and 4 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2016, respectively.
Figure 6Results of Unifrac cluster analysis of operational taxonomic units in the rhizospheric soil of X18 and Y138 at different sampling time. X18, Xushu 18; Y138, Yizi 138; 1 and 2 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2015, 3 and 4 represent sampling of early planting and early harvest in 2016, respectively.