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Autotoxin Rg(1) Induces Degradation of Root Cell Walls and Aggravates Root Rot by Modifying the Rhizospheric Microbiome

Management of crop root rot disease is one of the key factors in ensuring sustainable development in agricultural production. The accumulation of autotoxins and pathogens in soil has been reported as a primary driver of root rot diseases; however, less is known about the correlation of plants, their...

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Autores principales: Xu, Yanguo, Yang, Min, Yin, Rong, Wang, Luotao, Luo, Lifen, Zi, Bianxian, Liu, Haijiao, Huang, Huichuan, Liu, Yixiang, He, Xiahong, Zhu, Shusheng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8672892/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34908454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01679-21
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author Xu, Yanguo
Yang, Min
Yin, Rong
Wang, Luotao
Luo, Lifen
Zi, Bianxian
Liu, Haijiao
Huang, Huichuan
Liu, Yixiang
He, Xiahong
Zhu, Shusheng
author_facet Xu, Yanguo
Yang, Min
Yin, Rong
Wang, Luotao
Luo, Lifen
Zi, Bianxian
Liu, Haijiao
Huang, Huichuan
Liu, Yixiang
He, Xiahong
Zhu, Shusheng
author_sort Xu, Yanguo
collection PubMed
description Management of crop root rot disease is one of the key factors in ensuring sustainable development in agricultural production. The accumulation of autotoxins and pathogens in soil has been reported as a primary driver of root rot diseases; however, less is known about the correlation of plants, their associated pathogens and microbiome mediated by autotoxins as well as the contributions autotoxins make to the occurrence of root rot disease. Here, we integrated metabolomic, transcriptomic, and rhizosphere microbiome analyses to identify the root cell wall degradants cellobiose and d-galacturonic acid as being induced by the autotoxic ginsenoside Rg(1) of Panax notoginseng, and we found that exogenous cellobiose and d-galacturonic acid in addition to Rg(1) could aggravate root rot disease by modifying the rhizosphere microbiome. Microorganisms that correlated positively with root rot disease were enriched and those that correlated negatively were suppressed by exogenous cellobiose, d-galacturonic acid, and Rg(1). In particular, they promoted the growth and infection of the soilborne pathogen Ilyonectria destructans by upregulating pathogenicity-related genes. Cellobiose showed the highest ability to modify the microbiome and enhance pathogenicity, followed by Rg(1) and then d-galacturonic acid. Collectively, autotoxins damaged root systems to release a series of cell wall degradants, some of which modified the rhizosphere microbiome so that the host plant became more susceptible to root rot disease. IMPORTANCE The accumulation of autotoxins and pathogens in soil has been reported as a primary driver of root rot disease and one of the key factors limiting sustainable development in agricultural production. However, less is known about the correlation of plants, their associated pathogens, and the microbiome mediated by autotoxins, as well as the contributions autotoxins make to the occurrence of root rot disease. In our study, we found that autotoxins can damage root systems, thus releasing a series of cell wall degradants, and both autotoxins and the cell wall degradants they induce could aggravate root rot disease by reassembling the rhizosphere microbiome, resulting in the enrichment of pathogens and microorganisms positively related to the disease but the suppression of beneficial microorganisms. Deciphering this mechanism among plants, their associated pathogens, and the microbiome mediated by autotoxins will advance our fundamental knowledge of and ability to degrade autotoxins or employ microbiome to alleviate root rot disease in agricultural systems.
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spelling pubmed-86728922021-12-16 Autotoxin Rg(1) Induces Degradation of Root Cell Walls and Aggravates Root Rot by Modifying the Rhizospheric Microbiome Xu, Yanguo Yang, Min Yin, Rong Wang, Luotao Luo, Lifen Zi, Bianxian Liu, Haijiao Huang, Huichuan Liu, Yixiang He, Xiahong Zhu, Shusheng Microbiol Spectr Research Article Management of crop root rot disease is one of the key factors in ensuring sustainable development in agricultural production. The accumulation of autotoxins and pathogens in soil has been reported as a primary driver of root rot diseases; however, less is known about the correlation of plants, their associated pathogens and microbiome mediated by autotoxins as well as the contributions autotoxins make to the occurrence of root rot disease. Here, we integrated metabolomic, transcriptomic, and rhizosphere microbiome analyses to identify the root cell wall degradants cellobiose and d-galacturonic acid as being induced by the autotoxic ginsenoside Rg(1) of Panax notoginseng, and we found that exogenous cellobiose and d-galacturonic acid in addition to Rg(1) could aggravate root rot disease by modifying the rhizosphere microbiome. Microorganisms that correlated positively with root rot disease were enriched and those that correlated negatively were suppressed by exogenous cellobiose, d-galacturonic acid, and Rg(1). In particular, they promoted the growth and infection of the soilborne pathogen Ilyonectria destructans by upregulating pathogenicity-related genes. Cellobiose showed the highest ability to modify the microbiome and enhance pathogenicity, followed by Rg(1) and then d-galacturonic acid. Collectively, autotoxins damaged root systems to release a series of cell wall degradants, some of which modified the rhizosphere microbiome so that the host plant became more susceptible to root rot disease. IMPORTANCE The accumulation of autotoxins and pathogens in soil has been reported as a primary driver of root rot disease and one of the key factors limiting sustainable development in agricultural production. However, less is known about the correlation of plants, their associated pathogens, and the microbiome mediated by autotoxins, as well as the contributions autotoxins make to the occurrence of root rot disease. In our study, we found that autotoxins can damage root systems, thus releasing a series of cell wall degradants, and both autotoxins and the cell wall degradants they induce could aggravate root rot disease by reassembling the rhizosphere microbiome, resulting in the enrichment of pathogens and microorganisms positively related to the disease but the suppression of beneficial microorganisms. Deciphering this mechanism among plants, their associated pathogens, and the microbiome mediated by autotoxins will advance our fundamental knowledge of and ability to degrade autotoxins or employ microbiome to alleviate root rot disease in agricultural systems. American Society for Microbiology 2021-12-15 /pmc/articles/PMC8672892/ /pubmed/34908454 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01679-21 Text en Copyright © 2021 Xu 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
Xu, Yanguo
Yang, Min
Yin, Rong
Wang, Luotao
Luo, Lifen
Zi, Bianxian
Liu, Haijiao
Huang, Huichuan
Liu, Yixiang
He, Xiahong
Zhu, Shusheng
Autotoxin Rg(1) Induces Degradation of Root Cell Walls and Aggravates Root Rot by Modifying the Rhizospheric Microbiome
title Autotoxin Rg(1) Induces Degradation of Root Cell Walls and Aggravates Root Rot by Modifying the Rhizospheric Microbiome
title_full Autotoxin Rg(1) Induces Degradation of Root Cell Walls and Aggravates Root Rot by Modifying the Rhizospheric Microbiome
title_fullStr Autotoxin Rg(1) Induces Degradation of Root Cell Walls and Aggravates Root Rot by Modifying the Rhizospheric Microbiome
title_full_unstemmed Autotoxin Rg(1) Induces Degradation of Root Cell Walls and Aggravates Root Rot by Modifying the Rhizospheric Microbiome
title_short Autotoxin Rg(1) Induces Degradation of Root Cell Walls and Aggravates Root Rot by Modifying the Rhizospheric Microbiome
title_sort autotoxin rg(1) induces degradation of root cell walls and aggravates root rot by modifying the rhizospheric microbiome
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8672892/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34908454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01679-21
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