1. Root-soil-microbiome interaction in the rhizosphere of Masson pine (Pinus massoniana) under different levels of heavy metal pollution.
- Author
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Wu, Yingjie, Wang, Haidong, Peng, Lu, Zhao, Haiyang, Zhang, Qiannian, Tao, Qi, Tang, Xiaoyan, Huang, Rong, Li, Bing, and Wang, Changquan
- Subjects
HEAVY metal toxicology ,METAL content of soils ,SOIL chemistry ,BACTERIAL communities ,PLANT enzymes ,HEAVY metals ,RHIZOBACTERIA - Abstract
Heavy metal pollution of the soil affects the environment and human health. Masson pine is a good candidate for phytoremediation of heavy metal in mining areas. Microorganisms in the rhizosphere can help with the accumulation of heavy metal in host plants. However, studies on its rhizosphere bacterial communities under heavy metal pollution are still limited. Therefore, in this study, the chemical and bacterial characteristics of Masson pine rhizosphere under four different levels of heavy metal pollution were investigated using 16 S rRNA gene sequencing, soil chemistry and analysis of plant enzyme activities. The results showed that soil heavy metal content, plant oxidative stress and microbial diversity damage were lower the farther they were from the mine dump. The co-occurrence network relationship of slightly polluted soils (C1 and C2) was more complicated than that of highly polluted soils (C3 and C4). Relative abundance analysis indicated Sphingomonas and Pseudolabrys were more abundant in slightly polluted soils (C1 and C2), while Gaiella and Haliangium were more abundant in highly polluted soils (C3 and C4). LEfSe analysis indicated Burkholderiaceae, Xanthobacteraceae, Gemmatimonadaceae, Gaiellaceae were significantly enriched in C1 to C4 site, respectively. Mantel analysis showed that available cadmium (Cd) contents of soil was the most important factor influencing the bacterial community assembly. Correlation analysis showed that eight bacterial genus were significantly positively associated with soil available Cd content. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate the rhizospheric bacterial community of Masson pine trees under different degrees of heavy metal contamination, which lays the foundation for beneficial bacteria-based phytoremediation using Masson pines in the future. [Display omitted] • Sphingomonas, Bradyrhizobium and Haliangium were dominated in pine rhizosphere. • Bacterial network of HM polluted soil was simpler than that of clean soil. • Gaiella and Haliangium were representative taxa in HM polluted soils. • Soil available Cd was the most important factor influencing bacterial community. • Plant antioxidant was positively correlated with soil heavy metals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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