Introduction of probiotic bacterial consortia promotes plant growth via impacts on the resident rhizosphere microbiome

Author:

Hu Jie12ORCID,Yang Tianjie1ORCID,Friman Ville-Petri3ORCID,Kowalchuk George A.2,Hautier Yann2,Li Mei12,Wei Zhong1ORCID,Xu Yangchun1,Shen Qirong1ORCID,Jousset Alexandre12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Jiangsu Provincial Key Lab for Organic Solid Waste Utilization, Key Lab of Plant immunity, National Engineering Research Center for Organic-based Fertilizers, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Solid Organic Waste Resource Utilization, Nanjing Agricultural University, Weigang 1, Nanjing 210095, People’s Republic of China

2. Institute for Environmental Biology, Ecology and Biodiversity, Utrecht University, Padualaan 8, Utrecht 3584CH, The Netherlands

3. Department of Biology, University of York, Wentworth Way, York YO10 5DD, UK

Abstract

Plant growth depends on a range of functions provided by their associated rhizosphere microbiome, including nutrient mineralization, hormone co-regulation and pathogen suppression. Improving the ability of plant-associated microbiomes to deliver these functions is thus important for developing robust and sustainable crop production. However, it is yet unclear how beneficial effects of probiotic microbial inoculants can be optimized and how their effects are mediated. Here, we sought to enhance tomato plant growth by targeted introduction of probiotic bacterial consortia consisting of up to eight plant-associated Pseudomonas strains. We found that the effect of probiotic consortium inoculation was richness-dependent: consortia that contained more Pseudomonas strains reached higher densities in the tomato rhizosphere and had clearer beneficial effects on multiple plant growth characteristics. Crucially, these effects were best explained by changes in the resident community diversity, composition and increase in the relative abundance of initially rare taxa, instead of introduction of plant-beneficial traits into the existing community along with probiotic consortia. Together, our results suggest that beneficial effects of microbial introductions can be driven indirectly through effects on the diversity and composition of the resident plant rhizosphere microbiome.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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