Deciphering the mechanism of fungal pathogen‐induced disease‐suppressive soil

Author:

Wen Tao1ORCID,Ding Zhexu1ORCID,Thomashow Linda S.2ORCID,Hale Lauren3ORCID,Yang Shengdie1ORCID,Xie Penghao1,Liu Xiaoyu1,Wang Heqi1,Shen Qirong1,Yuan Jun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Key Laboratory of Plant Immunity, Jiangsu Provincial Key Lab for Organic Solid Waste Utilization, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Solid Organic Wastes, Educational Ministry Engineering Center of Resource‐Saving Fertilizers Nanjing Agricultural University Nanjing 210095 China

2. US Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service, Wheat Health, Genetics and Quality Research Unit Pullman WA 99164 USA

3. US Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service, San Joaquin Valley Agricultural Sciences Center 9611 S. Riverbend Avenue Parlier CA 93648 USA

Abstract

Summary One model of a disease‐suppressive soil predicts that the confrontation of plant with a phytopathogen can lead to the recruitment and accumulation of beneficial microorganisms. However, more information needs to be deciphered regarding which beneficial microbes become enriched, and how the disease suppression is achieved. Here, we conditioned soil by continuously growing eight generations of cucumber inoculated with Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. cucumerinum in a split‐root system. Disease incidence was found to decrease gradually upon pathogen infection accompanied with higher quantity of reactive oxygen species (ROS mainly OH) in roots and accumulation of Bacillus and Sphingomonas. These key microbes were proven to protect the cucumber from pathogen infection by inducing high ROS level in the roots through enrichment of pathways, including a two‐component system, a bacterial secretion system, and flagellar assembly revealed by metagenomics sequencing. Untargeted metabolomics analysis combined with in vitro application assays suggested that threonic acid and lysine were pivotal to recruit Bacillus and Sphingomonas. Collectively, our study deciphered a ‘cry for help’ case, wherein cucumber releases particular compounds to enrich beneficial microbes that raise the ROS level of host to prevent pathogen attack. More importantly, this may be one of the fundamental mechanisms underpinning disease‐suppressive soil formation.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Basic Research Program of China

Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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