Legumes maintain soil fertility thanks to their associated microbiota but arethreatened by climate change that causes soil microbial community struc-tural and functional modifications. The core microbiome associated with dif-ferent chickpea and lentil genotypes was described after an unexpectedclimatic event. Results showed that chickpea and lentil bulk soil micro-biomes varied significantly between two sampling time points, the firstimmediately after the rainfall and the second 2 weeks later. Rhizobia wereassociated with the soil of the more productive chickpea genotypes in termsof flower and fruit number. The root-associated bacteria and fungi were sur-veyed in lentil genotypes, considering that several parcels showed diseasesymptoms. The metabarcoding analysis revealed that reads related to fun-gal pathogens were significantly associated with one lentil genotype. A lentilcore prokaryotic community common to all genotypes was identified as wellas a genotype-specific one. A higher number of specific bacterial taxa andan enhanced tolerance to fungal diseases characterized a lentil landracecompared to the commercial varieties. This outcome supported the hypothesis that locally adapted landraces might have a high recruiting effi-ciency of beneficial soil microbes.
The'microbiome counterattack': Insights on the soil androot-associated microbiome in diverse chickpea and lentilgenotypes after an erratic rainfall event
Sillo F;Montesano V;Marino G;Zampieri E;Petruzzelli G;Centritto M;Balestrini R
2023
Abstract
Legumes maintain soil fertility thanks to their associated microbiota but arethreatened by climate change that causes soil microbial community struc-tural and functional modifications. The core microbiome associated with dif-ferent chickpea and lentil genotypes was described after an unexpectedclimatic event. Results showed that chickpea and lentil bulk soil micro-biomes varied significantly between two sampling time points, the firstimmediately after the rainfall and the second 2 weeks later. Rhizobia wereassociated with the soil of the more productive chickpea genotypes in termsof flower and fruit number. The root-associated bacteria and fungi were sur-veyed in lentil genotypes, considering that several parcels showed diseasesymptoms. The metabarcoding analysis revealed that reads related to fun-gal pathogens were significantly associated with one lentil genotype. A lentilcore prokaryotic community common to all genotypes was identified as wellas a genotype-specific one. A higher number of specific bacterial taxa andan enhanced tolerance to fungal diseases characterized a lentil landracecompared to the commercial varieties. This outcome supported the hypothesis that locally adapted landraces might have a high recruiting effi-ciency of beneficial soil microbes.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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