4.7 Article

Regulation of soil micro-foodwebs to root secondary metabolites in cultivated and wild licorice plants

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 828, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154302

Keywords

Soil eukaryotes; Microbial community assembly; Microbial networks; Gfrcyrrhiza uralensis Fisch

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41830755, 41807030]

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This study examines the diversity of soil eukaryotes and micro-foodwebs and their impact on root secondary metabolites in licorice. The findings suggest that soil fungi play a more significant role in regulating root secondary metabolites compared to soil protists. Additionally, rhizosphere soil and wild licorice have more complex networks, which are crucial for regulating root secondary metabolites. The study emphasizes the importance of understanding the role of different microbiotas in licorice plantation ecosystems.
The diversity of soil eukaryotes and micro-foodwebs are only partially understood. Moreover, how they affect secondary metabolites in plant roots under distinct soil environment is not well elucidated. By combining multiple statistical analyses and network constructions, variations in soil eukaryotic diversity, community assembly processes and potential associations of holistic microbiotas were investigated in the bulk and rhizosphere soils of cultivated and wild licorice, and their regulatory patterns for root secondary metabolites were elucidated. The protistan communities displayed lower alpha diversity, more varied beta diversity patterns, and higher stochastic processes, as compared with fungal communities. Soil fungi individually played a more essential role than soil protists in the regulation of root secondary metabolites. Furthermore, rhizosphere soil was associated with more complicated networks than bulk soil; and wild licorice was associated with more complicated networks than cultivated licorice. Specific responsive modules resulting from networks were essential for the regulation of root secondary metabolites and were mostly affected by edaphic properties. Moreover, these modules directly or indirectly regulated the root secondary metabolites to varying degrees in the presence of soil protists. This indicated that the secondary metabolites were affected by associations between protistan, fungal and bacterial groups, and not merely by individual types of microorganisms in agricultural ecosystems. This study provides insight into the responses of root secondary metabolites to different groups of soil eukaryotic diversity and micro-foodwebs. The results have implications for comprehensively understanding the characteristics of the separate and combined roles of microbiotas for environmental management of licorice plantation ecosystem.

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