Identity and timing of protist inoculation affect plant performance largely irrespective of changes in the rhizosphere microbial community.

IF 3.9 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Pub Date : 2025-04-23 Epub Date: 2025-03-31 DOI:10.1128/aem.00240-25
Nathalie Amacker, Zhilei Gao, Alexandre L C Jousset, Stefan Geisen, George A Kowalchuk
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Bacterivorous soil protists can have positive impacts on plant performance, making them attractive targets for novel strategies to improve crop production. However, we generally lack the knowledge required to make informed choices regarding the protist species to be used or the optimal conditions for such amendments. Here, we examined how identity, diversity, and timing of inoculation of well-described protists impacted plant development and rhizosphere microbiome assembly. We first studied the impact of individual inoculation of six well-characterized protists on lettuce growth, with Cercomonas sp. S24D2 emerging as the strain with the largest impact on plant growth. In a second step, we created a three-protist species mixture inoculant by adding two protist species (Acanthamoeba sp. C13D2 and a heterolobosean isolate S18D10), based on differences in their feeding patterns. We then inoculated Cercomonas sp. either individually or in the protist mixture to lettuce plants 1 week before, simultaneously with, or 1 week after seedling transfer. We monitored plant growth and nutrient content, as well as impacts on the resident soil and rhizosphere microbiome composition. We found that early protist inoculation provided the greatest increase in aboveground biomass compared to the non-inoculated control. Single- and mixed-species inoculations had similar impacts on plant development and only minor impacts on prokaryotic community composition. While early inoculation seems to be the most promising timing for eliciting the positive effects of protist amendments, further, more systematic studies will be necessary to determine the conditions and ecological interactions that yield consistent and predictable improvements in plant performance.

Importance: The application of microorganisms, including bacterivorous soil protists, has been increasingly suggested as a sustainable agricultural approach. While positive impacts of the presence of predatory protists have been generally reported, the effects of the selected species and amendment conditions are largely unknown. Here, we examined how identity, diversity, and timing of inoculation of well-described protists impacted plant development and rhizosphere microbiome assembly. One species emerged as the one having the strongest impact in our specific system. This result highlights the importance of species selection for optimal outcome, but also suggests a huge potential in the barely investigated protist diversity for targeted application. Furthermore, the application of the inoculants before plant transfer showed the strongest effects on plants, providing some useful and new insights on the optimal time for such amendments.

原生生物接种的身份和时机在很大程度上影响植物的生产性能,而与根际微生物群落的变化无关。
嗜菌土壤原生生物可以对植物的生长性能产生积极的影响,使它们成为提高作物产量的新策略的有吸引力的目标。然而,我们通常缺乏必要的知识来做出明智的选择,关于原生物种的使用或这种修改的最佳条件。在这里,我们研究了原生生物的身份、多样性和接种时间如何影响植物发育和根际微生物群的组装。我们首先研究了6种特性良好的原生生物单株接种对生菜生长的影响,发现对生菜生长影响最大的菌株是Cercomonas sp. S24D2。在第二步中,我们根据两种原生生物(棘阿米巴sp. C13D2和异色虫分离物S18D10)摄食方式的差异,添加了一种三原生生物混合接种剂。然后在移栽前1周、移栽时1周或移栽后1周分别将Cercomonas sp.单独或混合在原生菌中接种到生菜植株上。我们监测了植物生长和养分含量,以及对常驻土壤和根际微生物组成的影响。研究发现,与未接种对照相比,早期接种原生生物对地上生物量的增加最大。单种和混合种接种对植物发育的影响相似,对原核生物群落组成的影响较小。虽然早期接种似乎是最有希望引起原生植物修正的积极影响的时机,但进一步,需要更系统的研究来确定产生一致和可预测的植物性能改善的条件和生态相互作用。重要性:微生物的应用,包括嗜菌土壤原生生物,已经越来越多地被认为是一种可持续的农业方法。虽然掠夺性原生生物存在的积极影响已被广泛报道,但所选择的物种和修正条件的影响在很大程度上是未知的。在这里,我们研究了原生生物的身份、多样性和接种时间如何影响植物发育和根际微生物群的组装。有一个物种在我们的特定系统中产生了最强烈的影响。这一结果强调了物种选择对最佳结果的重要性,但也表明,在几乎没有被研究的原生生物多样性中,有针对性的应用具有巨大的潜力。此外,在植株移栽前施用接种剂对植株的影响最强,这为最佳接种时间的选择提供了一些有用的新见解。
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来源期刊
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Applied and Environmental Microbiology 生物-生物工程与应用微生物
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
2.30%
发文量
730
审稿时长
1.9 months
期刊介绍: Applied and Environmental Microbiology (AEM) publishes papers that make significant contributions to (a) applied microbiology, including biotechnology, protein engineering, bioremediation, and food microbiology, (b) microbial ecology, including environmental, organismic, and genomic microbiology, and (c) interdisciplinary microbiology, including invertebrate microbiology, plant microbiology, aquatic microbiology, and geomicrobiology.
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