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Fungal Community Structure in Disease Suppressive Soils Assessed by 28S LSU Gene Sequencing

Natural biological suppression of soil-borne diseases is a function of the activity and composition of soil microbial communities. Soil microbe and phytopathogen interactions can occur prior to crop sowing and/or in the rhizosphere, subsequently influencing both plant growth and productivity. Resear...

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Autores principales: Penton, C. Ryan, Gupta, V. V. S. R., Tiedje, James M., Neate, Stephen M., Ophel-Keller, Kathy, Gillings, Michael, Harvey, Paul, Pham, Amanda, Roget, David K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3974846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24699870
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093893
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author Penton, C. Ryan
Gupta, V. V. S. R.
Tiedje, James M.
Neate, Stephen M.
Ophel-Keller, Kathy
Gillings, Michael
Harvey, Paul
Pham, Amanda
Roget, David K.
author_facet Penton, C. Ryan
Gupta, V. V. S. R.
Tiedje, James M.
Neate, Stephen M.
Ophel-Keller, Kathy
Gillings, Michael
Harvey, Paul
Pham, Amanda
Roget, David K.
author_sort Penton, C. Ryan
collection PubMed
description Natural biological suppression of soil-borne diseases is a function of the activity and composition of soil microbial communities. Soil microbe and phytopathogen interactions can occur prior to crop sowing and/or in the rhizosphere, subsequently influencing both plant growth and productivity. Research on suppressive microbial communities has concentrated on bacteria although fungi can also influence soil-borne disease. Fungi were analyzed in co-located soils ‘suppressive’ or ‘non-suppressive’ for disease caused by Rhizoctonia solani AG 8 at two sites in South Australia using 454 pyrosequencing targeting the fungal 28S LSU rRNA gene. DNA was extracted from a minimum of 125 g of soil per replicate to reduce the micro-scale community variability, and from soil samples taken at sowing and from the rhizosphere at 7 weeks to cover the peak Rhizoctonia infection period. A total of ∼994,000 reads were classified into 917 genera covering 54% of the RDP Fungal Classifier database, a high diversity for an alkaline, low organic matter soil. Statistical analyses and community ordinations revealed significant differences in fungal community composition between suppressive and non-suppressive soil and between soil type/location. The majority of differences associated with suppressive soils were attributed to less than 40 genera including a number of endophytic species with plant pathogen suppression potentials and mycoparasites such as Xylaria spp. Non-suppressive soils were dominated by Alternaria, Gibberella and Penicillum. Pyrosequencing generated a detailed description of fungal community structure and identified candidate taxa that may influence pathogen-plant interactions in stable disease suppression.
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spelling pubmed-39748462014-04-08 Fungal Community Structure in Disease Suppressive Soils Assessed by 28S LSU Gene Sequencing Penton, C. Ryan Gupta, V. V. S. R. Tiedje, James M. Neate, Stephen M. Ophel-Keller, Kathy Gillings, Michael Harvey, Paul Pham, Amanda Roget, David K. PLoS One Research Article Natural biological suppression of soil-borne diseases is a function of the activity and composition of soil microbial communities. Soil microbe and phytopathogen interactions can occur prior to crop sowing and/or in the rhizosphere, subsequently influencing both plant growth and productivity. Research on suppressive microbial communities has concentrated on bacteria although fungi can also influence soil-borne disease. Fungi were analyzed in co-located soils ‘suppressive’ or ‘non-suppressive’ for disease caused by Rhizoctonia solani AG 8 at two sites in South Australia using 454 pyrosequencing targeting the fungal 28S LSU rRNA gene. DNA was extracted from a minimum of 125 g of soil per replicate to reduce the micro-scale community variability, and from soil samples taken at sowing and from the rhizosphere at 7 weeks to cover the peak Rhizoctonia infection period. A total of ∼994,000 reads were classified into 917 genera covering 54% of the RDP Fungal Classifier database, a high diversity for an alkaline, low organic matter soil. Statistical analyses and community ordinations revealed significant differences in fungal community composition between suppressive and non-suppressive soil and between soil type/location. The majority of differences associated with suppressive soils were attributed to less than 40 genera including a number of endophytic species with plant pathogen suppression potentials and mycoparasites such as Xylaria spp. Non-suppressive soils were dominated by Alternaria, Gibberella and Penicillum. Pyrosequencing generated a detailed description of fungal community structure and identified candidate taxa that may influence pathogen-plant interactions in stable disease suppression. Public Library of Science 2014-04-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3974846/ /pubmed/24699870 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093893 Text en © 2014 Penton et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Penton, C. Ryan
Gupta, V. V. S. R.
Tiedje, James M.
Neate, Stephen M.
Ophel-Keller, Kathy
Gillings, Michael
Harvey, Paul
Pham, Amanda
Roget, David K.
Fungal Community Structure in Disease Suppressive Soils Assessed by 28S LSU Gene Sequencing
title Fungal Community Structure in Disease Suppressive Soils Assessed by 28S LSU Gene Sequencing
title_full Fungal Community Structure in Disease Suppressive Soils Assessed by 28S LSU Gene Sequencing
title_fullStr Fungal Community Structure in Disease Suppressive Soils Assessed by 28S LSU Gene Sequencing
title_full_unstemmed Fungal Community Structure in Disease Suppressive Soils Assessed by 28S LSU Gene Sequencing
title_short Fungal Community Structure in Disease Suppressive Soils Assessed by 28S LSU Gene Sequencing
title_sort fungal community structure in disease suppressive soils assessed by 28s lsu gene sequencing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3974846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24699870
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093893
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