Strong shift in the diazotrophic endophytic bacterial community inhabiting rice (Oryza sativa) plants after flooding
Flooding impacts soil microbial communities, but its effect on endophytic communities has rarely been explored. This work addresses the effect of flooding on the abundance and diversity of endophytic diazotrophic communities on rice plants established in a greenhouse experiment. The nifH gene was si...
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Veröffentlicht in: | FEMS microbiology ecology 2015-09, Vol.91 (9), p.fiv104-fiv104 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Flooding impacts soil microbial communities, but its effect on endophytic communities has rarely been explored. This work addresses the effect of flooding on the abundance and diversity of endophytic diazotrophic communities on rice plants established in a greenhouse experiment. The nifH gene was significantly more abundant in roots after flooding, whereas the nifH gene copy numbers in leaves were unaffected and remained low. The PCA (principal component analysis) of T-RFLP (terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism) profiles indicated that root communities of replicate plots were more similar and diverse after flooding than before flooding. The nifH libraries obtained by cloning and 454 pyrosequencing consistently showed a remarkable shift in the diazotrophic community composition after flooding. Gammaproteobacteria (66–98%), mainly of the genus Stenotrophomonas, prevailed in roots before flooding, whereas Betaproteobacteria was the dominant class (26–34%) after flooding. A wide variety of aerotolerant and anaerobic diazotrophic bacteria (e.g. Dechloromonas, Rhodopseudomonas, Desulfovibrio, Geobacter, Chlorobium, Spirochaeta, Selenomonas and Dehalobacter) with diverse metabolic traits were retrieved from flooded rice roots. These findings suggest that endophytic communities could be significantly impacted by changes in plant–soil conditions derived from flooding during rice cropping.
Flooding affected deeply the abundance and diversity of nitrogen-fixing bacteria communities inhabiting inner tissues of rice roots. |
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ISSN: | 1574-6941 0168-6496 1574-6941 |
DOI: | 10.1093/femsec/fiv104 |