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Unveiling the Wheat Microbiome under Varied Agricultural Field Conditions

Wheat being the important staple food crop plays a significant role in nutritional security. A wide variety of microbial communities beneficial to plants and contributing to plant health and production are found in the rhizosphere. The wheat microbiome encompasses an extensive variety of microbial s...

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Autores principales: Jaiswal, Sarika, Aneja, Bharti, Jagannadham, Jaisri, Pandey, Bharati, Chhokar, Rajender Singh, Gill, Subhash Chander, Ahlawat, Om Parkash, Kumar, Anuj, Angadi, U. B., Rai, Anil, Tiwari, Ratan, Iquebal, Mir Asif, Kumar, Dinesh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9769940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36445165
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02633-22
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author Jaiswal, Sarika
Aneja, Bharti
Jagannadham, Jaisri
Pandey, Bharati
Chhokar, Rajender Singh
Gill, Subhash Chander
Ahlawat, Om Parkash
Kumar, Anuj
Angadi, U. B.
Rai, Anil
Tiwari, Ratan
Iquebal, Mir Asif
Kumar, Dinesh
author_facet Jaiswal, Sarika
Aneja, Bharti
Jagannadham, Jaisri
Pandey, Bharati
Chhokar, Rajender Singh
Gill, Subhash Chander
Ahlawat, Om Parkash
Kumar, Anuj
Angadi, U. B.
Rai, Anil
Tiwari, Ratan
Iquebal, Mir Asif
Kumar, Dinesh
author_sort Jaiswal, Sarika
collection PubMed
description Wheat being the important staple food crop plays a significant role in nutritional security. A wide variety of microbial communities beneficial to plants and contributing to plant health and production are found in the rhizosphere. The wheat microbiome encompasses an extensive variety of microbial species playing a key role in sustaining the physiology of the crop, nutrient uptake, and biotic/abiotic stress resilience. This report presents wheat microbiome analysis under six different farm practices, namely, organic (Org), timely sown (TS), wheat after pulse crop (WAPC), temperature-controlled phenotyping facility (TCPF), maize-wheat cropping system (MW), and residue burnt field (Bur), using 16S rRNA sequencing methodology. The soil samples collected from either side of the wheat row were mixed to get a final sample set for DNA extraction under each condition. After the data preprocessing, microbial community analysis was performed, followed by functional analysis and annotation. An abundance of the phylum Proteobacteria was observed, followed by Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Gemmatimonadetes in the majority of the samples, while relative abundance was found to vary at the genus level. Analysis against the Carbohydrate-Active Enzymes (CAZy) database showed a high number of glycoside hydrolase genes in the TS, TCPF, and WAPC samples, while the Org, MW, and Bur samples predominantly had glycosyltransferase genes and carbohydrate esterase genes were in the lowest numbers. Also, the Org and TCPF samples showed lower diversity, while rare and abundant species ranged from 12 to 25% and 20 to 32% of the total bacterial species in all the sets, respectively. These variations indicate that the different cropping sequence had a significant impact on soil microbial diversity and community composition, which characterizes its economic and environmental value as a sustainable agricultural approach to maintaining food security and ecosystem health. IMPORTANCE This investigation examined the wheat microbiome under six different agricultural field conditions to understand the role of cropping pattern on soil microbial diversity. This study also elaborated the community composition, which has importance in economic (role of beneficial community leading to higher production) and environmental (role of microbial diversity/community in safeguarding the soil health, etc.) arenas. This could lead to a sustainable farming approach for food security and improved ecosystem health. Also, the majority of the microbes are unculturable; hence, technology-based microcultivation will be a potential approach for harnessing other cultured microorganisms, leading to unique species for commercial production. The outcome of this research-accelerated work can provide an idea to the scientists/breeders/agronomists/pathologists under the mentioned field conditions regarding their influence over their crops.
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spelling pubmed-97699402022-12-22 Unveiling the Wheat Microbiome under Varied Agricultural Field Conditions Jaiswal, Sarika Aneja, Bharti Jagannadham, Jaisri Pandey, Bharati Chhokar, Rajender Singh Gill, Subhash Chander Ahlawat, Om Parkash Kumar, Anuj Angadi, U. B. Rai, Anil Tiwari, Ratan Iquebal, Mir Asif Kumar, Dinesh Microbiol Spectr Research Article Wheat being the important staple food crop plays a significant role in nutritional security. A wide variety of microbial communities beneficial to plants and contributing to plant health and production are found in the rhizosphere. The wheat microbiome encompasses an extensive variety of microbial species playing a key role in sustaining the physiology of the crop, nutrient uptake, and biotic/abiotic stress resilience. This report presents wheat microbiome analysis under six different farm practices, namely, organic (Org), timely sown (TS), wheat after pulse crop (WAPC), temperature-controlled phenotyping facility (TCPF), maize-wheat cropping system (MW), and residue burnt field (Bur), using 16S rRNA sequencing methodology. The soil samples collected from either side of the wheat row were mixed to get a final sample set for DNA extraction under each condition. After the data preprocessing, microbial community analysis was performed, followed by functional analysis and annotation. An abundance of the phylum Proteobacteria was observed, followed by Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Gemmatimonadetes in the majority of the samples, while relative abundance was found to vary at the genus level. Analysis against the Carbohydrate-Active Enzymes (CAZy) database showed a high number of glycoside hydrolase genes in the TS, TCPF, and WAPC samples, while the Org, MW, and Bur samples predominantly had glycosyltransferase genes and carbohydrate esterase genes were in the lowest numbers. Also, the Org and TCPF samples showed lower diversity, while rare and abundant species ranged from 12 to 25% and 20 to 32% of the total bacterial species in all the sets, respectively. These variations indicate that the different cropping sequence had a significant impact on soil microbial diversity and community composition, which characterizes its economic and environmental value as a sustainable agricultural approach to maintaining food security and ecosystem health. IMPORTANCE This investigation examined the wheat microbiome under six different agricultural field conditions to understand the role of cropping pattern on soil microbial diversity. This study also elaborated the community composition, which has importance in economic (role of beneficial community leading to higher production) and environmental (role of microbial diversity/community in safeguarding the soil health, etc.) arenas. This could lead to a sustainable farming approach for food security and improved ecosystem health. Also, the majority of the microbes are unculturable; hence, technology-based microcultivation will be a potential approach for harnessing other cultured microorganisms, leading to unique species for commercial production. The outcome of this research-accelerated work can provide an idea to the scientists/breeders/agronomists/pathologists under the mentioned field conditions regarding their influence over their crops. American Society for Microbiology 2022-11-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9769940/ /pubmed/36445165 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02633-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Jaiswal 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
Jaiswal, Sarika
Aneja, Bharti
Jagannadham, Jaisri
Pandey, Bharati
Chhokar, Rajender Singh
Gill, Subhash Chander
Ahlawat, Om Parkash
Kumar, Anuj
Angadi, U. B.
Rai, Anil
Tiwari, Ratan
Iquebal, Mir Asif
Kumar, Dinesh
Unveiling the Wheat Microbiome under Varied Agricultural Field Conditions
title Unveiling the Wheat Microbiome under Varied Agricultural Field Conditions
title_full Unveiling the Wheat Microbiome under Varied Agricultural Field Conditions
title_fullStr Unveiling the Wheat Microbiome under Varied Agricultural Field Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Unveiling the Wheat Microbiome under Varied Agricultural Field Conditions
title_short Unveiling the Wheat Microbiome under Varied Agricultural Field Conditions
title_sort unveiling the wheat microbiome under varied agricultural field conditions
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9769940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36445165
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02633-22
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