Bacterial and fungal composition and exometabolites control the development and persistence of soil water repellency.

IF 5.1 Q1 ECOLOGY
ISME communications Pub Date : 2025-05-20 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/ismeco/ycaf084
Emily N Boak, Benjamin P Bowen, Katherine B Louie, Trent R Northen, Marie E Kroeger
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Abstract

Soil water repellency (SWR), the reduced affinity of soil for water, is a phenomenon that affects soils globally. With worsening climate change, SWR is expected to increase emphasizing the need to understand the mechanisms driving SWR development and persistence. The importance of the soil microbes in SWR has been postulated for decades, but limited research has been conducted into whole-community interactions and the role of community metabolic activity. To address this gap in knowledge, we investigated the direct effect of microbial community composition, activity, and diversity, as well as their associated metabolites on the development and persistence of SWR by inoculating microcosms containing model soils with 15 different microbial communities and quantified respiration and SWR over time. Six communities that consistently produced either a hydrophobic or hydrophilic phenotype were characterized using metagenomics and metabolomics to determine the impact of microbial and metabolite composition and diversity on SWR. We identified several bacterial genera with significant changes in abundance between SWR phenotypes including Nocardiopsis and Kocuria in hydrophilic and Streptomyces and Cutibacterium in hydrophobic. We discovered that hydrophilic communities were more positively connected when compared to hydrophobic communities, which could be due to an increase in defense mechanism genes. Additionally, we identified specific metabolites associated with hydrophilic and hydrophobic phenotypes including an increase in the osmolyte ectoine in hydrophilic and an increase in plant-derived decomposition products in hydrophobic communities. Finally, our research suggests that fungi, previously thought to cause hydrophobicity, may actually contribute to hydrophilicity through their preferential consumption of hydrophobic compounds.

细菌和真菌的组成和外代谢产物控制着土壤拒水性的发展和持续。
土壤拒水是一种影响全球土壤的现象,土壤对水的亲和力降低。随着气候变化的加剧,SWR将会增加,强调需要了解驱动SWR发展和持续的机制。土壤微生物在SWR中的重要性已经被假设了几十年,但对整个群落的相互作用和群落代谢活动的作用进行的研究有限。为了解决这一知识空白,我们研究了微生物群落组成、活性和多样性及其相关代谢物对SWR发展和持续的直接影响,方法是接种含有15种不同微生物群落的模型土壤,并随时间量化呼吸和SWR。利用宏基因组学和代谢组学对6个始终产生疏水或亲水性表型的群落进行了表征,以确定微生物和代谢物组成和多样性对SWR的影响。我们发现了几个细菌属在SWR表型之间具有显著的丰度变化,包括亲水性的Nocardiopsis和Kocuria,疏水性的Streptomyces和Cutibacterium。我们发现,与疏水群落相比,亲水性群落的正相关程度更高,这可能是由于防御机制基因的增加。此外,我们还发现了与亲水性和疏水性表型相关的特定代谢物,包括亲水性群落中渗透性外托碱的增加和疏水性群落中植物源性分解产物的增加。最后,我们的研究表明,真菌,以前被认为是导致疏水性的,实际上可能通过它们优先消耗疏水性化合物来促进亲水性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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