Penicillium citrinum Provides Transkingdom Growth Benefits in Choy Sum (Brassica rapa var. parachinensis)

Author:

Gu Keyu1,Chen Cheng-Yen2,Selvaraj Poonguzhali2,Pavagadhi Shruti345,Yeap Yoon Ting34,Swarup Sanjay345,Zheng Wenhui6,Naqvi Naweed I.23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Applied Science, Republic Polytechnic, Singapore 738964, Singapore

2. Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory, Singapore 117604, Singapore

3. Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117558, Singapore

4. NUS Environmental Research Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117411, Singapore

5. Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences Engineering, Singapore 637551, Singapore

6. College of Plant Protection, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou 350002, China

Abstract

Soil-borne beneficial microbes establish symbioses with plant hosts and play key roles during growth and development therein. In this study, two fungal strains, FLP7 and B9, were isolated from the rhizosphere microbiome associated with Choy Sum (Brassica rapa var. parachinensis) and barley (Hordeum vulgare), respectively. Sequence analyses of the internal transcribed spacer and 18S ribosomal RNA genes combined with colony and conidial morphology identified FLP7 and B9 to be Penicillium citrinum strains/isolates. Plant–fungus interaction assays revealed that isolate B9 showed significant growth promotion effects in Choy Sum plants cultivated in normal soil, as well as under phosphate-limiting conditions. In comparison to the mock control, B9-inoculated plants showed a 34% increase in growth in aerial parts and an 85% upsurge in the fresh weight of roots when cultivated in sterilized soil. The dry biomass of such fungus-inoculated Choy Sum increased by 39% and 74% for the shoots and roots, respectively. Root colonization assays showed that P. citrinum associates directly with the root surface but does not enter or invade the root cortex of the inoculated Choy Sum plants. Preliminary results also indicated that P. citrinum can promote growth in Choy Sum via volatile metabolites too. Interestingly, we detected relatively higher amounts of gibberellins and cytokinins in axenic P. citrinum culture filtrates through liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry analyses. This could plausibly explain the overall growth induction in P. citrinum-inoculated Choy Sum plants. Furthermore, the phenotypic growth defects associated with the Arabidopsis ga1 mutant could be chemically complemented by the exogenous application of P. citrinum culture filtrate, which also showed accumulation of fungus-derived active gibberellins. Our study underscores the importance of transkingdom beneficial effects of such mycobiome-assisted nutrient assimilation and beneficial fungus-derived phytohormone-like metabolites in the induction of robust growth in urban farmed crops.

Funder

National Research Foundation

Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology (medical)

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