AI Article Synopsis

  • Disease-suppressive soils limit disease caused by specific soil-borne pathogens, despite the presence of both pathogens and susceptible host plants, largely due to beneficial microbial activity.
  • A study using metabarcoding analyzed the fungal and bacterial communities in Fusarium wilt-suppressive versus conducive soils from France, revealing significant differences in diversity and disease incidence.
  • The study identified unique fungal and bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in suppressive soils, suggesting their potential role in disease suppression, highlighting both known and previously unrecognized genera related to this effect.

Article Abstract

Disease-suppressive soils are soils in which specific soil-borne plant pathogens cause only limited disease although the pathogen and susceptible host plants are both present. Suppressiveness is in most cases of microbial origin. We conducted a comparative metabarcoding analysis of the taxonomic diversity of fungal and bacterial communities from suppressive and non-suppressive (conducive) soils as regards Fusarium wilts sampled from the Châteaurenard region (France). Bioassays based on Fusarium wilt of flax confirmed that disease incidence was significantly lower in the suppressive soil than in the conducive soil. Furthermore, we succeeded in partly transferring Fusarium wilt-suppressiveness to the conducive soil by mixing 10% (w/w) of the suppressive soil into the conducive soil. Fungal diversity differed significantly between the suppressive and conducive soils. Among dominant fungal operational taxonomic units (OTUs) affiliated to known genera, 17 OTUs were detected exclusively in the suppressive soil. These OTUs were assigned to the , and genera. Additionally, the relative abundance of specific members of the bacterial community was significantly higher in the suppressive and mixed soils than in the conducive soil. OTUs found more abundant in Fusarium wilt-suppressive soils were affiliated to the bacterial genera , and . Several of the fungal and bacterial genera detected exclusively or more abundantly in the Fusarium wilt-suppressive soil included genera known for their activity against . Overall, this study supports the potential role of known fungal and bacterial genera in Fusarium wilt suppressive soils from Châteaurenard and pinpoints new bacterial and fungal genera for their putative role in Fusarium wilt suppressiveness.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5893819PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.00568DOI Listing

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