4.6 Article

Multiomics Reveals the Effect of Root Rot on Polygonati Rhizome and Identifies Pathogens and Biocontrol Strain

Journal

MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/spectrum.02385-21

Keywords

medicinal plant; rhizome rot; root microbiota; PSM; polysaccharide and saponins; Streptomyces

Categories

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Support Project of Chinese Academy of Sciences: Demonstration Project of Poverty Alleviation and Rural Revitalization Strategy in Shuicheng District, Guizhou Province [KFJ-FP-202001]
  2. Research and Demonstration project of Agricultural and Rural High-Quality Transformation and Development in Shuicheng District, Guizhou Province [KFJ-FP-202103]
  3. Basic Research Funds of Hainan Academy of Agricultural Sciences (Open Project of Key Laboratory for Crop Breeding of Hainan Province) [2021-05]

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This study systematically investigated the interactions between the Polygonatum cyrtonema Hua root-associated microbiota and pathogens, and found that root rot disrupted the microbial community and reduced microbial diversity in the rhizomes and rhizosphere soil. The results also showed that P. cyrtonema can modulate the plant immune system and metabolic processes to defend against pathogens.
Root (rhizome) rot of Polygonatum plants has received substantial attention because it threatens yield and sustainable utilization in the polygonati rhizome industry. However, the potential pathogens that cause rhizome rot as well as the direct and indirect (via root-associated microbes) strategies by which Polygonatum defends against pathogens remain largely unknown. Herein, we used integrated multiomics of plant-targeted metabolomics and transcriptomics, microbiome, and culture-based methods to systematically investigate the interactions between the Polygonatum cyrtonema Hua root-associated microbiota and pathogens. We found that root rot inhibited P. cyrtonema rhizome growth and that the fresh weight significantly decreased (P < 0.001). The transcriptomic and metabonomic results showed that the expression of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) related to specialized metabolic and systemic resistance pathways, such as glycolysis/gluconeogenesis and flavonoid biosynthesis, cycloartenol synthase activity (related to saponin synthesis), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MARK) signaling, and plant hormone signal transduction, was particularly increased in diseased rhizomes. Consistently, the contents of lactose, D-fructose, sarsasapogenin, asperulosidic acid, botulin, myricadoil, and other saponins, which are functional medicinal compounds present in P. cyrtonema rhizomes, were also increased in diseased plants infected with rhizome rot. The microbiome sequencing and culture results showed that root rot disrupted the P. cyrtonema bacterial and fungal communities and reduced the microbial diversity in the rhizomes and rhizosphere soil. We further found that a clear enrichment of Streptomyces violascens XTBG45 (HJB-XTBG45) in the healthy rhizosphere could control the root rot caused by Fusarium oxysporum and Colletotrichum spaethianum. Taken together, our results indicate that P. cyrtonema can modulate the plant immune system and metabolic processes and enrich beneficial root microbiota to defend against pathogens. IMPORTANCE Root (rhizome or tuber) reproduction is the main method for the agricultural cultivation of many important cash crops, and infected crop plants rot, exhibit retarded growth, and experience yield losses. While many studies have investigated medicinal plants and their functional medicinal compounds, the occurrence of root (rhizome) rot of plant and soil microbiota has received little attention. Therefore, we used integrated multiomics and culture-based methods to systematically study rhizome rot on the famous Chinese medicine Polygonatum cyrtonema and identify pathogens and beneficial microbiota of rhizome rot. Rhizome rot disrupted the Polygonatum-associated microbiota and reduced microbial diversity, and rhizome transcription and metabolic processes significantly changed. Our work provides evidence that rhizome rot not only changes rhizome transcription and functional metabolite contents but also impacts the microbial community diversity, assembly, and function of the rhizome and rhizosphere. This study provides a new friendly strategy for medicinal plant breeding and agricultural utilization.

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