| Literature DB >> 31673871 |
Luyun Luo1,2, Pei Wang2, Zhongying Zhai2, Pin Su2, Xinqiu Tan2, Deyong Zhang2, Zhuo Zhang3, Yong Liu4.
Abstract
In recent years, the photosynthetic bacteria have been used widely in agriculture, but the effects of different agricultural applications on crop rhizosphere microorganism and crops are lack. In this study, we provide new insights into the structure and composition of the rice root-associated microbiomes as well as the effect on crop of the Rhodopseudomonas palustris(R. palustris) PSB06 and CGA009 at the rice seedling stage with seed immersion and root irrigation. Compare with CK group, the length of stem, the peroxidase (POD), and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activities in PSB06 treatment group was significantly higher, while the length of stem in CGA009 treatment group was significantly higher. The POD and SOD activities in CGA009 treatment groups only were higher slightly than the CK group. In the study, the dominant phyla were Proteobacteria (51.95-61.66%), Bacteroidetes (5.40-9.39%), Acidobacteria (4.50-10.52%), Actinobacteria (5.06-8.14%), Planctomycetes (2.90-4.48%), Chloroflexi (2.23-5.06%) and Firmicutes (2.38-7.30%), accounted for 87% bacterial sequences. The principal coordinate analysis (pCoA) and mantel results showed the two application actions of R. palustris CGA009 and PSB06 had significant effects on rice rhizosphere bacterial communities (p < 0.05). The PSB06 can significantly promote the rice growth and enhance stress resistance of rice at the seedling stage, while the R. palustris CGA009 has no significant effect on rice. Dissimilarity test and canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) results showed that the TN and pH were the key factors affecting rice rhizosphere bacterial community in the seedling stage. This study will provide some guidance advices for the study of the microecological regulation of photosynthetic bacteria on crops.Entities:
Keywords: CGA009; PSB06; Photosynthetic bacteria; Rhizosphere microorganism; Rice
Year: 2019 PMID: 31673871 PMCID: PMC6823419 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-019-0897-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Fig. 1The length of root, stalk (a) and the activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and peroxidase (POD) in rice seedling leaves (b). Control (CK): sterile water; treatment BP: the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment BC: the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009; treatment GP: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment GC: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009
Fig. 2Physicochemical properties of rice soils. OM: organic matter, TN: total N, TP: total P, AK: available K, AP: available P. Control (CK): sterile water; treatment BP: the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment BC: the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009; treatment GP: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment GC: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009
Summary of α diversity index among different treatments
| Group | Chao1 | Shannon | Inv_Simpson | Observed_richness |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CK | 6297.08 ± 185.77a | 6.5 ± 0.05ab | 182.12 ± 5.81a | 2579.17 ± 49.18a |
| BC | 5818.56 ± 268.11a | 6.06 ± 0.15b | 100.67 ± 12b | 2193.67 ± 115.51b |
| BP | 6522.76 ± 78.01a | 6.58 ± 0.03a | 134.13 ± 10.79ab | 2645.17 ± 20.97a |
| GC | 4393.84 ± 318.11b | 6.33 ± 0.14ab | 149 ± 26.98ab | 2399.17 ± 93.14ab |
| GP | 5438.62 ± 653.15a | 6.29 ± 0.24ab | 151.07 ± 27.9ab | 2386.83 ± 184.18ab |
Control (CK): sterile water; treatment BP: the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment BC: the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009; treatment GP: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment GC: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009
Different letters indicate the statistical differences at a p value of < 0.05 for a one-way ANOVA
Fig. 3Principal coordinate analysis (weighted_PCoA) of microbial communities based on Bray–Curtis dissimilarity matrices. Control (CK): sterile water; treatment BP: the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment BC: the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009; treatment GP: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment GC: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009
Fig. 4Canonical correspondence analyses (CCA) of the relative abundances of microbial communities with soil variables. OM: organic matter, TN: total N, TP: total P, AK: available K, AP: available P. Control (CK): sterile water; treatment BP: the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment BC: the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009; treatment GP: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent PSB06; treatment GC: root irrigation with the photosynthetic bacteria agent CGA009