Affiliation:
1. Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology, Uppsala BioCenter, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden
2. School of Science and Technology, Örebro University, Örebro, Sweden
Abstract
ABSTRACT
RNA stable isotope probing and high-throughput sequencing were used to characterize the active microbiomes of bacteria and fungi colonizing the roots and rhizosphere soil of oilseed rape to identify taxa assimilating plant-derived carbon following
13
CO
2
labeling. Root- and rhizosphere soil-associated communities of both bacteria and fungi differed from each other, and there were highly significant differences between their DNA- and RNA-based community profiles.
Verrucomicrobia
,
Proteobacteria
,
Planctomycetes
,
Acidobacteria
,
Gemmatimonadetes
,
Actinobacteria
, and
Chloroflexi
were the most active bacterial phyla in the rhizosphere soil.
Bacteroidetes
were more active in roots. The most abundant bacterial genera were well represented in both the
13
C- and
12
C-RNA fractions, while the fungal taxa were more differentiated.
Streptomyces
,
Rhizobium
, and
Flavobacterium
were dominant in roots, whereas
Rhodoplanes
and
Sphingomonas
(
Kaistobacter
) were dominant in rhizosphere soil. “
Candidatus
Nitrososphaera” was enriched in
13
C in rhizosphere soil.
Olpidium
and
Dendryphion
were abundant in the
12
C-RNA fraction of roots;
Clonostachys
was abundant in both roots and rhizosphere soil and heavily
13
C enriched.
Cryptococcus
was dominant in rhizosphere soil and less abundant, but was
13
C enriched in roots. The patterns of colonization and C acquisition revealed in this study assist in identifying microbial taxa that may be superior competitors for plant-derived carbon in the rhizosphere of
Brassica napus
.
IMPORTANCE
This microbiome study characterizes the active bacteria and fungi colonizing the roots and rhizosphere soil of
Brassica napus
using high-throughput sequencing and RNA-stable isotope probing. It identifies taxa assimilating plant-derived carbon following
13
CO
2
labeling and compares these with other less active groups not incorporating a plant assimilate.
Brassica napus
is an economically and globally important oilseed crop, cultivated for edible oil, biofuel production, and phytoextraction of heavy metals; however, it is susceptible to several diseases. The identification of the fungal and bacterial species successfully competing for plant-derived carbon, enabling them to colonize the roots and rhizosphere soil of this plant, should enable the identification of microorganisms that can be evaluated in more detailed functional studies and ultimately be used to improve plant health and productivity in sustainable agriculture.
Funder
Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology