4.8 Article

Effects of inoculating with lignocellulose-degrading consortium on cellulose-degrading genes and fungal community during co-composting of spent mushroom substrate with swine manure

Journal

BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 291, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2019.121876

Keywords

Cellulose-degrading gene; Co-occurrence pattern; Fungal community; Lignocellulose-degrading consortium; Network analysis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41671474, 41601531]
  2. Key Research and Development Program of Shaanxi [2017ZDCXL-SF-03-03]
  3. Shaanxi Province Academy of Sciences [2016k-21]
  4. Shaanxi Provincial Science and Technology Department [2017NY-128, 2019NY-197]

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Composting is used widely for recycling spent mushroom substrate (SMS). This study investigated the effects of inoculating a lignocellulose-degrading consortium at two levels comprising 0% (control: CK) and 10% (T) on the fungal community and cellulose-degrading genes during SMS co-composting with swine manure. Lignocellulose degradation rate in T was 8.77-34.45% higher compared with CK. Inoculation affected the distribution of the fungal community, increased the community diversity, and inhibited pathogens. Network analysis showed that inoculation changed the co-occurrence patterns of the fungal communities and made the co-composting system more stable. The relative abundances of glycoside hydrolase genes GH3E (fungal GH3), GH6, and GH7 were 0.45, 0.09, and 0.39 logs higher in T, respectively, than CK. Partial least-squares path modeling suggested that the variations in cellulose-degrading genes were driven mainly by changes in the fungal community during cocomposting. Therefore, the lignocellulose-degrading consortium accelerated the transformation of lignocellulose to facilitate safer composting.

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