Combined metagenomic and metabolomic analyses reveal that Bt rice planting alters soil C-N metabolism

Author:

Li Peng12ORCID,Ye Shuifeng3,Chen Jun4,Wang Luyao1,Li Yujie1,Ge Lei1,Wu Guogan1,Song Lili1,Wang Cui1,Sun Yu1,Wang Jinbin1,Pan Aihu1,Quan Zhexue5ORCID,Wu Yunfei6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Agricultural Genetics and Breeding, Biotechnology Research Institute, Shanghai Academy of Agricultural Sciences , 201106 Shanghai, China

2. Shanghai Co-Elite Agricultural Sci-Tech (Group) Co., Ltd , 201106 Shanghai, China

3. College of Life Sciences, Shangrao Normal University , 334001 Shangrao, China

4. East China University of Technology , 330013 Nanchang, China

5. School of Life Sciences, Fudan University , 200433 Shanghai, China

6. The College of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Yangzhou University , 225009 Yangzhou, China

Abstract

Abstract The environmental impacts of genetically modified (GM) plants remain a controversial global issue. To address these issues, comprehensive environmental risk assessments of GM plants is critical for the sustainable development and application of transgenic technology. In this paper, significant differences were not observed between microbial metagenomic and metabolomic profiles in surface waters of the Bt rice (T1C-1, the transgenic line) and non-Bt cultivars (Minghui 63 (the isogenic line) and Zhonghua 11 (the conventional japonica cultivar)). In contrast, differences in these profiles were apparent in the rhizospheres. T1C-1 planting increased soil microbiome diversity and network stability, but did not significantly alter the abundances of potential probiotic or phytopathogenic microorganisms compared with Minghui 63 and Zhonghua 11, which revealed no adverse effects of T1C-1 on soil microbial communities. T1C-1 planting could significantly alter soil C and N, probably via the regulation of the abundances of enzymes related to soil C and N cycling. In addition, integrated multi-omic analysis of root exudate metabolomes and soil microbiomes showed that the abundances of various metabolites released as root exudates were significantly correlated with subsets of microbial populations including the Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, Chloroflexi, and Gemmatimonadetes that were differentially abundant in T1C-1 and Mnghui 63 soils. Finally, the potential for T1C-1-associated root metabolites to exert growth effects on T1C-1-associated species was experimentally validated by analysis of bacterial cultures, revealing that Bt rice planting could selectively modulate specific root microbiota. Overall, this study indicate that Bt rice can directly modulate rhizosphere microbiome assemblages by altering the metabolic compositions of root exudates that then alters soil metabolite profiles and physiochemical properties. This study unveils the mechanistic associations of Bt plant-microorganism-environment, which provides comprehensive insights into the potential ecological impacts of GM plants.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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