| Literature DB >> 31875335 |
Fuki Okutani1, Shoichiro Hamamoto2, Yuichi Aoki3, Masaru Nakayasu1, Naoto Nihei2, Taku Nishimura2, Kazufumi Yazaki1, Akifumi Sugiyama1.
Abstract
Plant roots nurture a wide variety of microbes via exudation of metabolites, shaping the rhizosphere's microbial community. Despite the importance of plant specialized metabolites in the assemblage and function of microbial communities in the rhizosphere, little is known of how far the effects of these metabolites extend through the soil. We employed a fluid model to simulate the spatiotemporal distribution of daidzein, an isoflavone secreted from soybean roots, and validated using soybeans grown in a rhizobox. We then analysed how daidzein affects bacterial communities using soils artificially treated with daidzein. Simulation of daidzein distribution showed that it was only present within a few millimetres of root surfaces. After 14 days in a rhizobox, daidzein was only present within 2 mm of root surfaces. Soils with different concentrations of daidzein showed different community composition, with reduced α-diversity in daidzein-treated soils. Bacterial communities of daidzein-treated soils were closer to those of the soybean rhizosphere than those of bulk soils. This study highlighted the limited distribution of daidzein within a few millimetres of root surfaces and demonstrated a novel role of daidzein in assembling bacterial communities in the rhizosphere by acting as more of a repellant than an attractant.Entities:
Keywords: advection-diffusion equation; bacterial communities; rhizosphere modelling
Year: 2020 PMID: 31875335 DOI: 10.1111/pce.13708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell Environ ISSN: 0140-7791 Impact factor: 7.228