Effect of Wild and Cultivated Rice Genotypes on Rhizosphere Bacterial Community Composition.

Rice (N Y)

Laboratory for DNA Data Analysis, National Institute of Genetics, 1111 Yata, Mishima, Shizuoka, 411-8540, Japan.

Published: December 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The composition of microbial communities in the rhizosphere is affected by the plant's root secretion and influences plant growth and health.
  • Differences in microbial communities were observed between wild and cultivated rice genotypes, with domesticated varieties showing a distinct bacterial composition compared to their wild counterparts.
  • This study highlights that traits selected during the domestication of rice may have significant effects on the rhizosphere microbiota, indicating potential losses of beneficial microbial diversity in modern cultivars.

Article Abstract

Background: Deposition and secretion from roots influences the composition of the microbial communities surrounding them in the rhizosphere, and microbial activities influence the growth and health of the plant. Different host plant genotypes result in differences in those microbial communities. Crop genomes may have a narrow genetic base because of bottlenecks that occurred when domesticated crops were derived from small populations within the progenitor species. Desirable traits influencing root-associated microbial communities might therefore have been lost in the transition from wild species to modern cultivars. To investigate the diversity of bacterial communities associated with wild and cultivated rice, we surveyed a series of plant species and cultivars spanning the Oryza genus, growing them in the same nutrient-poor soil and assessing the bacterial composition of their rhizospheres and the surrounding soil using 16S rDNA sequencing.

Results: Root-associated bacterial communities showed small but significant differences dependent on the plant genotype. We found that differences between bacteria associated with differing plant genotypes were only weakly correlated with the phylogenetic distance between the Oryza wild species and cultivars. In ordination plots, domesticated and wild samples could be separated on the basis of their associated bacterial communities. Taxa of the Anaerolineae were overrepresented in wild samples compared to domesticated ones. Certain methanotrophs were overrepresented in the earliest diverged part of the Oryza genus.

Conclusions: Bacterial populations associated with the rhizosphere of wild rice species displayed differences with those associated with cultivars, suggesting that root traits selected in domestication could have significant influence on the rhizosphere microbiota composition. Variation within the genus seems to influence the representation of methanotrophs. This suggests that greenhouse emissions from paddy fields could be altered by manipulating plant genotypes through the introgression of wild rice genetic material.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4996804PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12284-016-0111-8DOI Listing

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