Links between Soil Bacteriobiomes and Fungistasis toward Fungi Infecting the Colorado Potato Beetle

Author:

Chertkova Ekaterina1,Kabilov Marsel R.2ORCID,Yaroslavtseva Olga1,Polenogova Olga1ORCID,Kosman Elena1ORCID,Sidorenko Darya1,Alikina Tatyana2,Noskov Yury1,Krivopalov Anton1ORCID,Glupov Viktor V.1,Kryukov Vadim Yu.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Systematics and Ecology of Animals, Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk 630091, Russia

2. Institute of Chemical Biology and Fundamental Medicine, Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk 630090, Russia

Abstract

Entomopathogenic fungi can be inhibited by different soil microorganisms, but the effect of a soil microbiota on fungal growth, survival, and infectivity toward insects is insufficiently understood. We investigated the level of fungistasis toward Metarhizium robertsii and Beauveria bassiana in soils of conventional potato fields and kitchen potato gardens. Agar diffusion methods, 16S rDNA metabarcoding, bacterial DNA quantification, and assays of Leptinotarsa decemlineata survival in soils inoculated with fungal conidia were used. Soils of kitchen gardens showed stronger fungistasis toward M. robertsii and B. bassiana and at the same time the highest density of the fungi compared to soils of conventional fields. The fungistasis level depended on the quantity of bacterial DNA and relative abundance of Bacillus, Streptomyces, and some Proteobacteria, whose abundance levels were the highest in kitchen garden soils. Cultivable isolates of bacilli exhibited antagonism to both fungi in vitro. Assays involving inoculation of nonsterile soils with B. bassiana conidia showed trends toward elevated mortality of L. decemlineata in highly fungistatic soils compared to low-fungistasis ones. Introduction of antagonistic bacilli into sterile soil did not significantly change infectivity of B. bassiana toward the insect. The results support the idea that entomopathogenic fungi can infect insects within a hypogean habitat despite high abundance and diversity of soil antagonistic bacteria.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

Reference65 articles.

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