The planting of transgenic rice has aroused ongoing controversy, due to the public anxiety surrounding the potential risk of transgenic rice to health and the environment. The soil microbial community plays an important environmental role in the plant-soil-microbe system; however, few studies have focused on the effect of transgenic rice on the soil rhizospheric microbiome. We labeled transgenic gene rice (TT51, transformed with Cry1Ab/1Ac gene), able to produce the Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis) toxin, its parental variety (Minghui 63), and a non-parental variety (9931) with CO. The DNA of the associated soil rhizospheric microbes was extracted, subjected to density gradient centrifugation, followed by high-throughput sequencing of bacterial 16S rRNA gene. Unweighted unifrac analysis of the sequencing showed that transgenic rice did not significantly change the soil bacterial community structure compared with its parental variety. The order Opitutales, affiliated to phylum Verrucomicrobia and order Sphingobacteriales, was the main group of labeled bacteria in soil planted with the transgenic and parental varieties, while the orders Pedosphaerales, Chthoniobacteraceae, also affiliated to Verrucomicrobia, and the genus Geobacter, affiliated to class Deltaproteobacteria, dominated in the soil of the non-parental rice variety. The non-significant difference in soil bacterial community structure of labeled microbes between the transgenic and parental varieties, but the comparatively large difference with the non-parental variety, suggests a limited effect of planting transgenic Bt rice on the soil microbiome.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00253-019-09751-w | DOI Listing |
Theor Appl Genet
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Key Laboratory of Germplasm Enhancement, Physiology and Ecology of Food Crops in Cold Region, Ministry of Education, Northeast Agricultural University, Harbin, 150030, China.
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Biobank, The Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University, Luzhou, Sichuan, China; Department of Clinical Medicine, Southwest Medical University, Luzhou, Sichuan, China.
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Department of Plant Biosecurity, Key Laboratory of Surveillance and Management for Plant Quarantine Pests, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, College of Plant Protection, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China.
New Phytol
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Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, 61801, USA.
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National Key Laboratory for Tropical Crop Breeding, College of Tropical Agriculture and Forestry, Hainan University, Sanya 572025, China.
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