| Literature DB >> 34925249 |
Yuanhui Liu1,2,3, Bin Ma1,2,4, Wenfeng Chen5, Klaus Schlaeppi6,7, Matthias Erb7, Erinne Stirling1,2,4,8, Lingfei Hu1,2, Entao Wang9, Yunzeng Zhang10, Kankan Zhao1,2, Zhijiang Lu1,2, Shudi Ye1,2, Jianming Xu1,2.
Abstract
Root-microbiome interactions are of central importance for plant performance and yield. A distinctive feature of legumes is that they engage in symbiosis with N2-fixing rhizobia. If and how the rhizobial symbiotic capacity modulates root-associated microbiomes are still not yet well understood. We determined root-associated microbiomes of soybean inoculated with wild type (WT) or a noeI mutant of Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens USDA 110 by amplicon sequencing. UPLC-MS/MS was used to analyze root exudates. The noeI gene is responsible for fucose-methylation of Nod factor secreted by USDA 110 WT strain. Soybean roots inoculated with the noeI mutant showed a significant decrease in nodulation and root-flavonoid exudation compared to roots inoculated with WT strain. The noeI mutant-inoculated roots exhibited strong changes in microbiome assembly in the rhizosphere and rhizoplane, including reduced diversity, changed co-occurrence interactions and a substantial depletion of root microbes. Root exudates and soil physiochemical properties were significantly correlated with microbial community shift in the rhizosphere between different rhizobial treatments. These results illustrate that rhizobial symbiotic capacity dramatically alters root-associated microbiomes, in which root exudation and edaphic patterns play a vital role. This study has important implications for understanding the evolution of plant-microbiome interactions.Entities:
Keywords: Glycine max; rhizobia; root exudation; root-associated microbiome; symbiosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34925249 PMCID: PMC8678110 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.709012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1The experimental design and symbiotic phenotypes of soybean inoculated with rhizobia. (A) Soybean plants (Glycine max C08) were inoculated with Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens USDA 110 WT or noeI mutant. Sterile 0.8% NaCl solution was used as control. The rhizosphere soil, rhizoplane soil, endosphere, and nodules were sampled 45days post-inoculation (dpi). In addition, unplanted soil samples treated with the same treatments were collected at 45 dpi. ① Rhizosphere soil samples were collected by vortexed shaking and washing in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) buffer, ② rhizoplane soil samples were collected from sonicating and washing, ③ endosphere samples were obtained by surface-sterilizing, and ④ nodules were collected from the cleaned roots. (B) Images depicting the root system of soybean plants inoculated with the USDA 110 WT or the noeI mutant or the control solution (scale bars: 1cm); Scored nodulation phenotypes included (C) number of nodules per plant, (D) nodule weight, (E) nodule nitrogenase activity, (F) height of plant, (G) leaf chlorophyll content (SPAD), (H) dry weight of shoots and, (I) dry weight of roots. Means and standard errors are based on 16 scored plants; different letters indicate significant differences among treatments [Least Significant Difference (LSD) test, p<0.05].
Figure 2Compartment-specific modulation of microbial communities by rhizobia differing in noeI gene. (A) α-diversity (Shannon index) among different rhizobial treatments in the unplanted soil, rhizosphere, rhizoplane, endosphere, and nodule compartments. Treatments are wild-type USDA 110 (WT), noeI mutant (Mutant), and not inoculated with rhizobia (Control). Different letters indicate significant differences among treatments (Dunn’s multiple-comparison test; p<0.05). (B) β-diversity principal coordinate analysis (PCoA; weighted UniFrac distances) of unplanted soil, rhizosphere, rhizoplane, endosphere, and nodule communities of soybean inoculated with wild type and mutant rhizobia, and of the control.
Figure 3Difference of rhizobial noeI affects niche differentiation in the rhizosphere. Bubble plots showing niche differentiation of rhizo-compartments in soybean roots inoculated with wild type (WT) USDA 110 (A) and noeI mutant rhizobia (B). Compartment X/compartment Y (e.g., Rhizosphere/Bulk soil) represents the significantly enriched OTUs in compartment X relative to compartment Y (p<0.05), bubble color indicates operational taxonomic unit (OTU) taxonomic affiliation (class), and grey boxes indicate the OTU taxonomic affiliation (phylum). (C) Differences in taxonomic abundance between the WT and noeI mutant treatments in unplanted soil, rhizosphere, rhizoplane, endosphere, and nodule samples at the family level (STAMP; Welch’s t-test; p<0.05).
Figure 4Co-occurrence of networks of rhizo-compartments in samples inoculated with rhizobia. The networks were constructed based on Spearman correlation analysis of taxonomic profiles; p<0.05. Node size is proportional to degree; color indicates taxa (family); wild type (WT); noeI mutant (Mutant).
Figure 5Role of flavonoid exudates in noeI-dependent effects. (A) Flavonoid concentration in exudates collected from soybean roots inoculated with wild type (WT) and noeI mutant (Mutant) rhizobia, and from uninoculated soil (Control); * indicates significant differences among treatments (LSD test, p<0.05). (B) Taxonomic abundance differences between soil supplemented with flavonoids and control (STAMP; Welch’s t-test, p<0.05). (C) Redundancy analysis (RDA) of rhizosphere microbial community distribution and environmental factors, soil exchangeable magnesium (Mg2+). (D) The effects of dominant environmental factors on the structure of microbial communities in rhizosphere [variation partitioning analysis (VPA) independent variance; value <0 not shown].
Figure 6Proposed mechanisms underlying how rhizobium with mutated nodulation gene noeI affects soybean root-associated microbiomes.