Cargando…

Drought stress modifies the community structure of root-associated microbes that improve Atractylodes lancea growth and medicinal compound accumulation

Atractylodes lancea is an important medicinal plant in traditional Chinese medicine, its rhizome is rich of volatile secondary metabolites with medicinal values and is largely demanded in modern markets. Currently, supply of high-yield, high-quality A. lancea is mainly achieved via cultivation. Cert...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wang, Hongyang, Wang, Yuefeng, Kang, Chuanzhi, Wang, Sheng, Zhang, Yan, Yang, Guang, Zhou, Li, Xiang, Zengxu, Huang, Luqi, Liu, Dahui, Guo, Lanping
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9756954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36531372
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.1032480
_version_ 1784851727017574400
author Wang, Hongyang
Wang, Yuefeng
Kang, Chuanzhi
Wang, Sheng
Zhang, Yan
Yang, Guang
Zhou, Li
Xiang, Zengxu
Huang, Luqi
Liu, Dahui
Guo, Lanping
author_facet Wang, Hongyang
Wang, Yuefeng
Kang, Chuanzhi
Wang, Sheng
Zhang, Yan
Yang, Guang
Zhou, Li
Xiang, Zengxu
Huang, Luqi
Liu, Dahui
Guo, Lanping
author_sort Wang, Hongyang
collection PubMed
description Atractylodes lancea is an important medicinal plant in traditional Chinese medicine, its rhizome is rich of volatile secondary metabolites with medicinal values and is largely demanded in modern markets. Currently, supply of high-yield, high-quality A. lancea is mainly achieved via cultivation. Certain soil microbes can benefit plant growth, secondary metabolism and induce resistance to environmental stresses. Hence, studies on the effects of soil microbe communities and isolates microorganisms on A. lancea is extremely meaningful for future application of microbes on cultivation. Here we investigated the effects of the inoculation with an entire soil microbial community on the growth, resistance to drought, and accumulation of major medicinal compounds (hinesol, β-eudesmol, atractylon and atractylodin) of A. lancea. We analyzed the interaction between A. lancea and the soil microbes at the phylum and genus levels under drought stress of different severities (inflicted by 0%, 10% and 25% PEG6000 treatments). Our results showed that inoculation with soil microbes promoted the growth, root biomass yield, medicinal compound accumulation, and rendered drought-resistant traits of A. lancea, including relatively high root:shoot ratio and high root water content under drought. Moreover, our results suggested drought stress was more powerful than the selectivity of A. lancea in shaping the root-associated microbial communities; also, the fungal communities had a stronger role than the bacterial communities in protecting A. lancea from drought. Specific microbial clades that might have a role in protecting A. lancea from drought stress were identified: at the genus level, the rhizospheric bacteria Bacillus, Dylla and Actinomadura, and rhizospheric fungi Chaetomium, Acrophialophora, Trichoderma and Thielava, the root endophytic bacteria Burkholderia-Caballeronia-Paraburkholderia, Allorhizobium-Neorhizobium-Pararhizobium-Rhizobium, Dylla and Actinomadura, and the root endophytic fungus Fusarium were closely associated with A. lancea under drought stress. Additionally, we acquired several endophytic Paenibacillus, Paraburkholderia and Fusarium strains and verified they had differential promoting effects on the medicinal compound accumulation in A. lancea root. This study reports the interaction between A. lancea and soil microbe communities under drought stress, and provides insights for improving the outcomes in A. lancea farming via applying microbe inoculation.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9756954
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-97569542022-12-17 Drought stress modifies the community structure of root-associated microbes that improve Atractylodes lancea growth and medicinal compound accumulation Wang, Hongyang Wang, Yuefeng Kang, Chuanzhi Wang, Sheng Zhang, Yan Yang, Guang Zhou, Li Xiang, Zengxu Huang, Luqi Liu, Dahui Guo, Lanping Front Plant Sci Plant Science Atractylodes lancea is an important medicinal plant in traditional Chinese medicine, its rhizome is rich of volatile secondary metabolites with medicinal values and is largely demanded in modern markets. Currently, supply of high-yield, high-quality A. lancea is mainly achieved via cultivation. Certain soil microbes can benefit plant growth, secondary metabolism and induce resistance to environmental stresses. Hence, studies on the effects of soil microbe communities and isolates microorganisms on A. lancea is extremely meaningful for future application of microbes on cultivation. Here we investigated the effects of the inoculation with an entire soil microbial community on the growth, resistance to drought, and accumulation of major medicinal compounds (hinesol, β-eudesmol, atractylon and atractylodin) of A. lancea. We analyzed the interaction between A. lancea and the soil microbes at the phylum and genus levels under drought stress of different severities (inflicted by 0%, 10% and 25% PEG6000 treatments). Our results showed that inoculation with soil microbes promoted the growth, root biomass yield, medicinal compound accumulation, and rendered drought-resistant traits of A. lancea, including relatively high root:shoot ratio and high root water content under drought. Moreover, our results suggested drought stress was more powerful than the selectivity of A. lancea in shaping the root-associated microbial communities; also, the fungal communities had a stronger role than the bacterial communities in protecting A. lancea from drought. Specific microbial clades that might have a role in protecting A. lancea from drought stress were identified: at the genus level, the rhizospheric bacteria Bacillus, Dylla and Actinomadura, and rhizospheric fungi Chaetomium, Acrophialophora, Trichoderma and Thielava, the root endophytic bacteria Burkholderia-Caballeronia-Paraburkholderia, Allorhizobium-Neorhizobium-Pararhizobium-Rhizobium, Dylla and Actinomadura, and the root endophytic fungus Fusarium were closely associated with A. lancea under drought stress. Additionally, we acquired several endophytic Paenibacillus, Paraburkholderia and Fusarium strains and verified they had differential promoting effects on the medicinal compound accumulation in A. lancea root. This study reports the interaction between A. lancea and soil microbe communities under drought stress, and provides insights for improving the outcomes in A. lancea farming via applying microbe inoculation. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-12-02 /pmc/articles/PMC9756954/ /pubmed/36531372 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.1032480 Text en Copyright © 2022 Wang, Wang, Kang, Wang, Zhang, Yang, Zhou, Xiang, Huang, Liu and Guo https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
Wang, Hongyang
Wang, Yuefeng
Kang, Chuanzhi
Wang, Sheng
Zhang, Yan
Yang, Guang
Zhou, Li
Xiang, Zengxu
Huang, Luqi
Liu, Dahui
Guo, Lanping
Drought stress modifies the community structure of root-associated microbes that improve Atractylodes lancea growth and medicinal compound accumulation
title Drought stress modifies the community structure of root-associated microbes that improve Atractylodes lancea growth and medicinal compound accumulation
title_full Drought stress modifies the community structure of root-associated microbes that improve Atractylodes lancea growth and medicinal compound accumulation
title_fullStr Drought stress modifies the community structure of root-associated microbes that improve Atractylodes lancea growth and medicinal compound accumulation
title_full_unstemmed Drought stress modifies the community structure of root-associated microbes that improve Atractylodes lancea growth and medicinal compound accumulation
title_short Drought stress modifies the community structure of root-associated microbes that improve Atractylodes lancea growth and medicinal compound accumulation
title_sort drought stress modifies the community structure of root-associated microbes that improve atractylodes lancea growth and medicinal compound accumulation
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9756954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36531372
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.1032480
work_keys_str_mv AT wanghongyang droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT wangyuefeng droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT kangchuanzhi droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT wangsheng droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT zhangyan droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT yangguang droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT zhouli droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT xiangzengxu droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT huangluqi droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT liudahui droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation
AT guolanping droughtstressmodifiesthecommunitystructureofrootassociatedmicrobesthatimproveatractylodeslanceagrowthandmedicinalcompoundaccumulation