4.7 Article

Differential Microbial Communities in Paddy Soils Between Guiyang Plateaus and Chengdu Basins Drive the Incidence of Rice Bacterial Diseases

Journal

PLANT DISEASE
Volume 106, Issue 7, Pages 1882-1889

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-09-21-1974-RE

Keywords

basins; metagenomic sequencing; network analysis; plateaus; rice bacterial diseases; soil microbial diversity

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [U1704234]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China: Inter-Governmental S&T Cooperation Proposal [2019YFE0108500]

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Southwest China has diverse topography in rice-growing regions, leading to differences in microbial diversity and functionality in paddy soils. These differences affect the incidence of rice bacterial diseases. The dominant microbial genera and environmental factors vary between Chengdu and Guiyang, leading to different disease patterns.
Southwest China has the most complex rice-growing regions in China. With great differences in topography, consisting mainly of basins and plateaus, ecological factors differ greatly between regions. In this study, bulk paddy soils collected from long-term rice fields in Chengdu (basins) and Guiyang (plateaus) were used to study the correlation between microbial diversity and the incidence of rice bacterial diseases. Results showed that the microbial community composition in paddy soils and the microbial functional categories differed significantly between basins and plateaus. They shared >70% of the dominant genera (abundance >1%), but the abundance of the dominant genera differed significantly. Functional analysis found that bulk paddy soils from Chengdu were significantly enriched in virulence factor-related genes; soils from Guiyang were enriched in biosynthesis of secondary metabolites, especially antibiotics. Correspondingly, Chengdu was significantly enriched in leaf bacterial pathogens Acidovorax, Xanthomonas, and Pseudomonas. Greenhouse experiments and correlation analysis showed that soil chemical properties had a greater effect on microbial community composition and positively correlated with the higher incidence of rice bacterial foot rot in Guiyang, whereas temperature had a greater effect on soil microbial functions and positively correlated with the higher severity index of leaf bacterial diseases in Chengdu. Our results provide a new perspective on how differences in microbial communities in paddy soils can influence the incidence of rice bacterial diseases in areas with different topographies.

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