Soil microbe inoculation alters the bacterial communities and promotes root growth of Atractylodes lancea under heat stress
Purpose Atractylodes lancea is a medicinal plant widely used in treating rheumatic diseases, digestive disorders, night blindness, and influenza. Microbes greatly impact plant growth and metabolism. However, the microbiome associated with A. lancea remains unclear. Hence, we aimed at assessing the e...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant and soil 2022-09, Vol.478 (1-2), p.371-389 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
Atractylodes lancea
is a medicinal plant widely used in treating rheumatic diseases, digestive disorders, night blindness, and influenza. Microbes greatly impact plant growth and metabolism. However, the microbiome associated with
A. lancea
remains unclear. Hence, we aimed at assessing the effect of soil microbe inoculation on
A. lancea
under heat stress from multiple perspectives, including regulation of growth, valuable secondary metabolites, root endophytic and rhizosphere bacterial communities.
Methods
A. lancea
was inoculated with soil microbes, then grown under normal/high temperature. Biomass, chlorophyll contents, production of major medicinal compounds, physiochemical properties of the soil, and in the composition of root bacterial communities of
A. lancea
were investigated.
Results
Soil microbe inoculation promoted root sink strength, accumulation of medicinal compounds, and attenuated damage caused by heat stress
. A. lancea
showed preference for the endophytic bacterial genera
Rhodococcus
,
Ralstonia
,
Dongia Paenibacillus
and
Burkholderia-Caballeronia-Paraburkholderia
post-inoculation, the latter four genera playing important roles in protection from heat stress, with abundance of the latter two specifically positively correlated to medicinal compound production.
A. lancea
enriched the bacterial genera
Saccharimonadales
,
Novosphingobium
and excluded
Chitinophaga
in its rhizosphere post-inoculation.
Conclusions
Soil microbes characteristically promoted
A. lancea
growth, improved heat stress tolerance, and promoted root medicinal compound accumulation.
A. lancea
selectively enriched particular endophytic and rhizospheric bacterial communities post-inoculation, possibly due to unique aromatic root exudates. The selected bacteria potentially synergistically improved soil available nutrients and uptake by root. Bacterial species selected by
A. lancea
root have the potential to serve as biological fertilizers for
A. lancea
farming
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ISSN: | 0032-079X 1573-5036 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11104-022-05369-6 |