4.6 Article

Responses of rhizosphere microbial community structure and metabolic function to heavy metal coinhibition

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOCHEMISTRY AND HEALTH
Volume 45, Issue 8, Pages 6177-6198

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10653-023-01626-4

Keywords

Heavy metal costress; Rhizosphere bacterial community; Zea mays L; Metal speciation

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Metal mineral mining releases large amounts of heavy metals into the environment, affecting plant growth and human health. In this study, the response of rhizosphere microbial communities to multiple heavy metals was explored by adding cadmium to a soil with high vanadium and chromium concentrations. The results showed that complex heavy metals hindered maize growth and had a significant impact on microbial diversity and abundance. Additionally, tolerant bacteria were attracted to the maize rhizosphere, and different forms of heavy metals had varying effects on microbial metabolic pathways.
Metal mineral mining results in releases of large amounts of heavy metals into the environment, and it is necessary to better understand the response of rhizosphere microbial communities to simultaneous stress from multiple heavy metals (HMs), which directly impacts plant growth and human health. In this study, by adding different concentrations of cadmium (Cd) to a soil with high background concentrations of vanadium (V) and chromium (Cr), the growth of maize during the jointing stage was explored under limiting conditions. High-throughput sequencing was used to explore the response and survival strategies of rhizosphere soil microbial communities to complex HM stress. The results showed that complex HMs inhibited the growth of maize at the jointing stage, and the diversity and abundance of maize rhizosphere soil microorganisms were significantly different at different metal enrichment levels. In addition, according to the different stress levels, the maize rhizosphere attracted many tolerant colonizing bacteria, and cooccurrence network analysis showed that these bacteria interacted very closely. The effects of residual heavy metals on beneficial microorganisms (such as Xanthomonas, Sphingomonas, and lysozyme) were significantly stronger than those of bioavailable metals and soil physical and chemical properties. PICRUSt analysis revealed that the different forms of V and Cd had significantly greater effects on microbial metabolic pathways than all forms of Cr. Cr mainly affected the two major metabolic pathways: microbial cell growth and division and environmental information transmission. In addition, significant differences in rhizosphere microbial metabolism under different concentrations were found, and this can serve as a reference for subsequent metagenomic analysis. This study is helpful for exploring the threshold for the growth of crops in toxic HM soils in mining areas and achieving further biological remediation.

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