Cargando…

Cooperative Action of Fulvic Acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis Ferment in Regulating Soil Microbiota and Improving Soil Fertility and Plant Resistance to Bacterial Wilt Disease

Excessive continuous cropping and soil degradation, such as acidification, hardening, fertility decline, and the degradation of microbial community, lead to the epidemic of soilborne diseases and cause great loss in agriculture production. Application of fulvic acid can improve the growth and yield...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zhao, Xiuyun, Zhu, Di, Tan, Jun, Wang, Rui, Qi, Gaofu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10100657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36861975
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04079-22
_version_ 1785025325005012992
author Zhao, Xiuyun
Zhu, Di
Tan, Jun
Wang, Rui
Qi, Gaofu
author_facet Zhao, Xiuyun
Zhu, Di
Tan, Jun
Wang, Rui
Qi, Gaofu
author_sort Zhao, Xiuyun
collection PubMed
description Excessive continuous cropping and soil degradation, such as acidification, hardening, fertility decline, and the degradation of microbial community, lead to the epidemic of soilborne diseases and cause great loss in agriculture production. Application of fulvic acid can improve the growth and yield of various crops and effectively suppress soilborne plant diseases. Bacillus paralicheniformis strain 285-3 producing poly-gamma-glutamic acid is used to remove the organic acid that can cause soil acidification and increase the fertilizer effect of fulvic acid and the effect of improving soil quality and inhibiting soilborne disease. In field experiments, the application of fulvic acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis ferment effectively reduced the incidence of bacterial wilt disease and improved soil fertility. Both fulvic acid powder and B. paralicheniformis ferment improved soil microbial diversity and increased the complexity and stability of the microbial network. For B. paralicheniformis ferment, the molecular weight of poly-gamma-glutamic acid became smaller after heating, which could better improve the soil microbial community and network structure. In fulvic acid and B. paralicheniformis ferment-treated soils, the synergistic interaction between microorganisms increased and the number of keystone microorganisms increased, which included antagonistic bacteria and plant growth-promoting bacteria. Changes in the microbial community and network structure were the main reason for the reduced incidence of bacterial wilt disease. Application of fulvic acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis ferment improved soil physicochemical properties and effectively controlled bacterial wilt disease by changing microbial community and network structure and enriching antagonistic and beneficial bacteria. IMPORTANCE Continuous cropping tobacco has led to soil degradation and caused soilborne bacterial wilt disease. Fulvic acid as a biostimulator was applied to restore soil and control bacterial wilt disease. For improving its effect, fulvic acid was fermented with Bacillus paralicheniformis strain 285-3 producing poly-gamma-glutamic acid. Fulvic acid and B. paralicheniformis ferment inhibited bacterial wilt disease, improved soil quality, enriched beneficial bacteria, and increased microbial diversity and microbial network complexity. Some keystone microorganisms in fulvic acid and B. paralicheniformis ferment-treated soils had potential antimicrobial activity and plant growth-promoting attributes. Fulvic acid and B. paralicheniformis 285-3 ferment could be used to restore soil quality and microbiota and control bacterial wilt disease. This study found new biomaterial to control soilborne bacterial disease by combining fulvic acid and poly-gamma-glutamic acid application.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10100657
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher American Society for Microbiology
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101006572023-04-14 Cooperative Action of Fulvic Acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis Ferment in Regulating Soil Microbiota and Improving Soil Fertility and Plant Resistance to Bacterial Wilt Disease Zhao, Xiuyun Zhu, Di Tan, Jun Wang, Rui Qi, Gaofu Microbiol Spectr Research Article Excessive continuous cropping and soil degradation, such as acidification, hardening, fertility decline, and the degradation of microbial community, lead to the epidemic of soilborne diseases and cause great loss in agriculture production. Application of fulvic acid can improve the growth and yield of various crops and effectively suppress soilborne plant diseases. Bacillus paralicheniformis strain 285-3 producing poly-gamma-glutamic acid is used to remove the organic acid that can cause soil acidification and increase the fertilizer effect of fulvic acid and the effect of improving soil quality and inhibiting soilborne disease. In field experiments, the application of fulvic acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis ferment effectively reduced the incidence of bacterial wilt disease and improved soil fertility. Both fulvic acid powder and B. paralicheniformis ferment improved soil microbial diversity and increased the complexity and stability of the microbial network. For B. paralicheniformis ferment, the molecular weight of poly-gamma-glutamic acid became smaller after heating, which could better improve the soil microbial community and network structure. In fulvic acid and B. paralicheniformis ferment-treated soils, the synergistic interaction between microorganisms increased and the number of keystone microorganisms increased, which included antagonistic bacteria and plant growth-promoting bacteria. Changes in the microbial community and network structure were the main reason for the reduced incidence of bacterial wilt disease. Application of fulvic acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis ferment improved soil physicochemical properties and effectively controlled bacterial wilt disease by changing microbial community and network structure and enriching antagonistic and beneficial bacteria. IMPORTANCE Continuous cropping tobacco has led to soil degradation and caused soilborne bacterial wilt disease. Fulvic acid as a biostimulator was applied to restore soil and control bacterial wilt disease. For improving its effect, fulvic acid was fermented with Bacillus paralicheniformis strain 285-3 producing poly-gamma-glutamic acid. Fulvic acid and B. paralicheniformis ferment inhibited bacterial wilt disease, improved soil quality, enriched beneficial bacteria, and increased microbial diversity and microbial network complexity. Some keystone microorganisms in fulvic acid and B. paralicheniformis ferment-treated soils had potential antimicrobial activity and plant growth-promoting attributes. Fulvic acid and B. paralicheniformis 285-3 ferment could be used to restore soil quality and microbiota and control bacterial wilt disease. This study found new biomaterial to control soilborne bacterial disease by combining fulvic acid and poly-gamma-glutamic acid application. American Society for Microbiology 2023-03-02 /pmc/articles/PMC10100657/ /pubmed/36861975 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04079-22 Text en Copyright © 2023 Zhao et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Zhao, Xiuyun
Zhu, Di
Tan, Jun
Wang, Rui
Qi, Gaofu
Cooperative Action of Fulvic Acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis Ferment in Regulating Soil Microbiota and Improving Soil Fertility and Plant Resistance to Bacterial Wilt Disease
title Cooperative Action of Fulvic Acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis Ferment in Regulating Soil Microbiota and Improving Soil Fertility and Plant Resistance to Bacterial Wilt Disease
title_full Cooperative Action of Fulvic Acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis Ferment in Regulating Soil Microbiota and Improving Soil Fertility and Plant Resistance to Bacterial Wilt Disease
title_fullStr Cooperative Action of Fulvic Acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis Ferment in Regulating Soil Microbiota and Improving Soil Fertility and Plant Resistance to Bacterial Wilt Disease
title_full_unstemmed Cooperative Action of Fulvic Acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis Ferment in Regulating Soil Microbiota and Improving Soil Fertility and Plant Resistance to Bacterial Wilt Disease
title_short Cooperative Action of Fulvic Acid and Bacillus paralicheniformis Ferment in Regulating Soil Microbiota and Improving Soil Fertility and Plant Resistance to Bacterial Wilt Disease
title_sort cooperative action of fulvic acid and bacillus paralicheniformis ferment in regulating soil microbiota and improving soil fertility and plant resistance to bacterial wilt disease
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10100657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36861975
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04079-22
work_keys_str_mv AT zhaoxiuyun cooperativeactionoffulvicacidandbacillusparalicheniformisfermentinregulatingsoilmicrobiotaandimprovingsoilfertilityandplantresistancetobacterialwiltdisease
AT zhudi cooperativeactionoffulvicacidandbacillusparalicheniformisfermentinregulatingsoilmicrobiotaandimprovingsoilfertilityandplantresistancetobacterialwiltdisease
AT tanjun cooperativeactionoffulvicacidandbacillusparalicheniformisfermentinregulatingsoilmicrobiotaandimprovingsoilfertilityandplantresistancetobacterialwiltdisease
AT wangrui cooperativeactionoffulvicacidandbacillusparalicheniformisfermentinregulatingsoilmicrobiotaandimprovingsoilfertilityandplantresistancetobacterialwiltdisease
AT qigaofu cooperativeactionoffulvicacidandbacillusparalicheniformisfermentinregulatingsoilmicrobiotaandimprovingsoilfertilityandplantresistancetobacterialwiltdisease