Frontiers in Microbiology (Oct 2022)

Maize stalk rot caused by Fusarium graminearum alters soil microbial composition and is directly inhibited by Bacillus siamensis isolated from rhizosphere soil

  • Kang Zhang,
  • Kang Zhang,
  • Liming Wang,
  • Liming Wang,
  • Helong Si,
  • Hao Guo,
  • Jianhu Liu,
  • Jiao Jia,
  • Qianfu Su,
  • Yanbo Wang,
  • Jinping Zang,
  • Jihong Xing,
  • Jihong Xing,
  • Jingao Dong,
  • Jingao Dong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.986401
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Maize stalk rot caused by Fusarium graminearum can reduce the yield of maize and efficiency of mechanized harvesting. Besides, deoxynivalenol and zearalenone toxins produced by F. graminearum can also affect domestic animals and human health. As chemical fungicides are expensive and exert negative effects on the environment, the use of biological control agents has become attractive in recent years. In the present study, we collected rhizosphere soil with severe stalk rot disease (ZDD), the rhizosphere soil with disease-free near by the ZDD (ZDH), and measured rhizosphere microbial diversity and microbial taxonomic composition by amplicon sequencing targeting either bacteria or fungi. The results showed that Fusarium stalk rot caused by the Fusarium species among which F. graminearum is frequent and can reduce the abundance and alpha diversity of rhizosphere microbial community, and shift the beta diversity of microorganisms. Furthermore, a bacterial strain, Bacillus siamensis GL-02, isolated from ZDD, was found to significantly affect growth of F. graminearum. In vitro and in vivo assays demonstrated that B. siamensis GL-02 had good capability to inhibit F. graminearum. These results revealed that B. siamensis GL-02 could be a potential biocontrol agent for the control of maize stalk rot.

Keywords