4.7 Article

Endophytic Fungal and Bacterial Microbiota Shift in Rice and Barnyardgrass Grown under Co-Culture Condition

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11121592

Keywords

rice; barnyardgrass; biotic stress; endophytic bacteria; endophytic fungi; PICRUSt; FUNGuild; network

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31701803]
  2. Changsha Natural Science Foundation [kq2202336]
  3. Special Project of Hunan Innovative Province Construction [S2021ZCKPZT0004]

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This study found that in the presence of barnyardgrass, rice had higher bacterial diversity but lower fungal richness compared to the barnyardgrass. Rice recruited more endophytic bacteria at certain growth stages and more endophytic fungi at other stages to combat the biotic stress from barnyardgrass. The composition of endophytic bacteria and fungi in the roots of rice and barnyardgrass differed, and there was a negative correlation between bacteria and fungi in both species.
Although barnyardgrass (Echinochloa crus-galli L.) is more competitive than rice (Oryza sativa L.) in the aboveground part, little is known about whether barnyardgrass is still competitive in recruiting endophytes and the root microbiota composition variation of rice under the barnyardgrass stress. Here, by detailed temporal characterization of root-associated microbiomes of rice plants during co-planted barnyardgrass stress and a comparison with the microbiomes of unplanted soil, we found that the bacterial community diversity of rice was dramatically higher while the fungal community richness was significantly lower than that of barnyardgrass at BBCH 45 and 57. More importantly, rice recruited more endophytic bacteria at BBCH 45 and 57, and more endophytic fungi at BBCH 17, 24, 37 to aginst the biotic stress from barnyardgrass. Principal coordinates analysis (PCoA) showed that rice and barnyardgrass had different community compositions of endophytic bacteria and fungi in roots. The PICRUSt predictive analysis indicated that majority of metabolic pathways of bacteria were overrepresented in barnyardgrass. However, eleven pathways were significantly presented in rice. In addition, rice and barnyardgrass harbored different fungal trophic modes using FUNGuild analysis. A negative correlation between bacteria and fungi in rice and barnyardgrass roots was found via network analysis. Actinobacteria was the vital bacteria in rice, while Proteobacteria dominated in barnyardgrass, and Ascomycota was the vital fungi in each species. These findings provided data and a theoretical basis for the in-depth understanding of the competition of barnyardgrass and endophytes and have implications relevant to weed prevention and control strategies using root microbiota.

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