Intercropping enhances maize growth and nutrient uptake by driving the link between rhizosphere metabolites and microbiomes

Author:

Jiang Pan1ORCID,Wang Yizhe1ORCID,Zhang Yuping123,Fei Jiangchi123,Rong Xiangmin123,Peng Jianwei123,Yin Lichu12,Luo Gongwen123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Resources Hunan Agricultural University Changsha 410128 China

2. National Engineering Laboratory for Efficient Utilization of Soil and Fertilizer Resources Changsha 410128 China

3. Hunan Provincial Key Laboratory of Farmland Pollution Control and Agricultural Resources Use Changsha 410128 China

Abstract

Summary Intercropping leads to different plant roots directly influencing belowground processes and has gained interest for its promotion of increased crop yields and resource utilization. However, the precise mechanisms through which the interactions between rhizosphere metabolites and the microbiome contribute to plant production remain ambiguous, thus impeding the understanding of the yield‐enhancing advantages of intercropping. This study conducted field experiments (initiated in 2013) and pot experiments, coupled with multi‐omics analysis, to investigate plant–metabolite–microbiome interactions in the rhizosphere of maize. Field‐based data revealed significant differences in metabolite and microbiome profiles between the rhizosphere soils of maize monoculture and intercropping. In particular, intercropping soils exhibited higher microbial diversity and metabolite chemodiversity. The chemodiversity and composition of rhizosphere metabolites were significantly related to the diversity, community composition, and network complexity of soil microbiomes, and this relationship further impacted plant nutrient uptake. Pot‐based findings demonstrated that the exogenous application of a metabolic mixture comprising key components enriched by intercropping (soyasapogenol B, 6‐hydroxynicotinic acid, lycorine, shikimic acid, and phosphocreatine) significantly enhanced root activity, nutrient content, and biomass of maize in natural soil, but not in sterilized soil. Overall, this study emphasized the significance of rhizosphere metabolite–microbe interactions in enhancing yields in intercropping systems. It can provide new insights into rhizosphere controls within intensive agroecosystems, aiming to enhance crop production and ecosystem services.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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