对37种堆肥的分析揭示了与病害抑制相关的微生物类群。

IF 3.7 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Anja Logo, Benedikt Boppré, Jacques Fuchs, Monika Maurhofer, Thomas Oberhänsli, Barbara Thürig, Franco Widmer, Johanna Mayerhofer, Pascale Flury
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引用次数: 0

摘要

当涉及到抑制土传病原体时,堆肥是土壤和盆栽基质的有价值的改良剂。然而,不同堆肥的效果各不相同,目前还无法预测。堆肥中的微生物群落在病害抑制中起着关键作用,因此其组成或特定分类群可作为抑制堆肥的指标。在本研究中,我们调查了来自7个商业堆肥生产商的37种堆肥,分析了它们的细菌和真菌群落与3种植物-病原体系统:水芹-球孢,黄瓜- g的抑制活性的关系。黄瓜-茄根丝核菌。我们的研究结果强调,堆肥抑制主要是病原体特异性的,在较小程度上是寄主植物特异性的。抑制作用与堆肥的理化性质、微生物活性或细菌和真菌群落的α和β多样性无关。相反,微生物组成在很大程度上取决于生产者特定的堆肥条件和成熟过程,而这些条件和抑制活性不一定相关。对抑制作用最强和最弱的堆肥进行了更细致的比较,发现细菌和一些真菌分类群是每种植物-病原体系统抑制作用的潜在指标。值得注意的是,对于G. ultimum-suppression,来自Luteimonas, Sphingopyxis和Algoriphagus属的细菌,以及对于R. solani,属于放线菌门的细菌成为了有希望的候选人。重要性:土传病害是全世界农作物生产的主要产量限制因素,特别是在苗木栽培中。它们的控制仍然是一项重大挑战,仍然主要依赖于土壤的化学熏蒸和盆栽基质的蒸汽灭菌。虽然化学熏蒸剂因其对环境的负面影响而受到越来越多的批评,但通常情况下,灭菌做法会破坏有益的微生物群落,使基质更容易受到病原体(再)侵袭。改良土壤或盆栽基质与疾病抑制堆肥提供了一个很有前途的选择。然而,有针对性地使用堆肥进行植物保护受到了不同效果和缺乏可靠的工具来确定有效的堆肥的阻碍。本研究提供了一个全面的非生物和生物特性的堆肥,使详细的特性分析与抑制。指示疾病抑制堆肥的细菌和真菌分类群的鉴定为有针对性地分离微生物和功能研究奠定了基础,最终目的是预测和优化堆肥介导的疾病抑制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Analyses of 37 composts revealed microbial taxa associated with disease suppressiveness.

Compost is a valuable amendment for soil and potting substrate when it comes to suppressing soilborne pathogens. However, the effectiveness of different composts varies and cannot yet be predicted. Microbial communities in compost play a key role in disease suppression, and therefore their composition or specific taxa may serve as indicators of suppressive composts. In this study, we investigated 37 composts from 7 commercial compost producers to analyze the association of their bacterial and fungal communities with suppressive activity in three plant-pathogen systems: cress-Globisporangium ultimum, cucumber-G. ultimum, and cucumber-Rhizoctonia solani. Our results underscore that compost suppressiveness is primarily pathogen-specific and, to a lesser extent, host-plant-specific. Suppressiveness was not correlated with physicochemical properties, microbial activity, or the alpha- and beta-diversity of composts' bacterial and fungal communities. Instead, microbial composition was largely shaped by producer-specific composting conditions and maturation processes, which were not necessarily linked to suppressive activity. A more nuanced comparison between the most and least suppressive composts revealed bacterial and a few fungal taxa as potential indicators of suppressiveness for each plant-pathogen system. Notably, for G. ultimum-suppression, bacteria from the genera Luteimonas, Sphingopyxis, and Algoriphagus, and for R. solani, bacteria belonging to the phylum Actinomycetota emerged as promising candidates.

Importance: Soilborne diseases are a major yield-limiting factor in agricultural crop production worldwide, particularly in seedling cultivation. Their control remains a significant challenge and still largely relies on chemical fumigation of soils and steam sterilization of potting substrates. While chemical fumigants are increasingly criticized for their negative environmental impact, sterilization practices, in general, disrupt beneficial microbial communities, making substrates more susceptible to pathogen (re)-infestation. Amending soil or potting substrate with disease-suppressive compost offers a promising alternative. However, the targeted use of compost for plant protection is hindered by variable effectiveness and the lack of reliable tools to identify effective composts. This study provides a comprehensive abiotic and biotic characterization of compost, enabling a detailed analysis of the properties associated with suppressiveness. The identification of bacterial and fungal taxa indicative of disease-suppressive composts lays the groundwork for targeted isolation of microorganisms and functional studies, with the ultimate aim of predicting and optimizing compost-mediated disease suppression.

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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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