Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Jan 2024)

Root-associated bacterial microbiome shaped by root selective effects benefits phytostabilization by Athyrium wardii (Hook.)

  • Yunhong Zhang,
  • Juan Zhan,
  • Chuang Ma,
  • Wuxing Liu,
  • Huagang Huang,
  • Haiying Yu,
  • Peter Christie,
  • Tingxuan Li,
  • Longhua Wu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 269
p. 115739

Abstract

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The root-associated microbiome assembly substantially promotes (hyper)accumulator plant growth and metal accumulation and is influenced by multiple factors, especially host species and environmental stress. Athyrium wardii (Hook.) is a phytostabilizer that grows in lead (Pb)-zinc (Zn) mine tailings and shows high root Pb accumulation. However, there remains little information on the assembly of the root-associated microbiome of A. wardii and its role in phytostabilization. A field study investigated the structural and functional variation in the root-associated bacterial microbiome of Athyrium wardii (Hook.) exposed to different levels of contamination in Pb-Zn mine tailings. The root compartment dominated the variation in the root-associated bacterial microbiome but the levels of contaminants showed less impact. Bacterial co-occurrence was enhanced in the rhizosphere soil and rhizoplane but tended to be much simpler in the endosphere in terms of network complexity and connectivity. This indicates that the microbial community assembly of A. wardii was non-random and shaped by root selective effects. Proteobacteria, Chloroflexi, Actinobacteria, Cyanobacteria, and Acidobacteriota were generally the dominant bacterial phyla. The genera Crossiella and Bradyrhizobium were enriched in the rhizosphere and cyanobacterial genera were enriched in the endosphere, demonstrating substantial advantages to plant survival and adaptation in the harsh mine environment. Functional categories involved in amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism were abundant in the rhizosphere soil, thus contributing to metal solubility and bioavailability in the rhizosphere. Membrane transporters, especially ATP-binding cassette transporters, were enriched in the endosphere, indicating a potential role in metal tolerance and transportation in A. wardii. The study shows substantial variation in the structure and function of microbiomes colonizing different compartments, with the rhizosphere and endophytic microbiota potentially involved in plant metal tolerance and accumulation during phytostabilization.

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