4.2 Article

Taxonomical and functional bacterial community profiling in disease-resistant and disease-susceptible soybean cultivars

Journal

BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 3, Pages 1355-1370

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s42770-022-00746-w

Keywords

Soybean; Disease-resistant; Disease-susceptible; DNA sequencing; Biofertilizers

Categories

Funding

  1. DST Inspire PhD. Fellowship from the department of science and technology, New Delhi, India [IF160797]
  2. DST-SERB, New Delhi, Govt of India [CRG/2021/003696]

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This study investigated the bacterial diversity and metabolic features of disease-resistant and disease-susceptible soybean rhizosphere. The results showed that disease-resistant samples had a higher abundance of bacteria involved in nitrogen fixation, carbon fixation, ammonification, denitrification, and antibiotic production. Additionally, the functional activity of bacterial communities was higher in disease-resistant soils.
Highly varied bacterial communities inhabiting the soybean rhizosphere perform important roles in its growth and production; nevertheless, little is known about the changes that occur in these communities under disease-stress conditions. The present study investigated the bacterial diversity and their metabolic profile in the rhizosphere of disease-resistant (JS-20-34) and disease-susceptible (JS-335) soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) cultivars using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing and community-level physiological profiling (CLPP). In disease-resistant soybean (AKADR) samples, the most dominating phyla were Actinobacteria (40%) followed by Chloroflexi (24%), Proteobacteria (20%), and Firmicutes (12%), while in the disease-susceptible (AKADS) sample, the most dominating phyla were Proteobacteria (35%) followed by Actinobacteria (27%) and Bacteroidetes (17%). Functional profiling of bacterial communities was done using the METAGENassist, and PICRUSt2 software, which shows that AKADR samples have more ammonifying, chitin degrading, nitrogen-fixing, and nitrite reducing bacteria compared to AKADS rhizosphere samples. The bacterial communities present in disease-resistant samples were significantly enriched with genes involved in nitrogen fixation, carbon fixation, ammonification, denitrification, and antibiotic production. Furthermore, the CLPP results show that carbohydrates and carboxylic acids were the most frequently utilized nutrients by the microbes. The principal component analysis (PCA) revealed that the AKADR soils had higher functional activity (strong association with the Shannon-Wiener index, richness index, and hydrocarbon consumption) than AKADS rhizospheric soils. Overall, our findings suggested that the rhizosphere of resistant varieties of soybean comprises of beneficial bacterial population over susceptible varieties.

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