Bacterial infections are the cause of rhizome rot in ginger (). Key members of the endophytic microbial community in ginger rhizomes have not been identified, and their impact on the decay of rhizomes during the activation of adventitious bud development has not been investigated. High-throughput, 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing and inoculation experiments were used to analyze the microbial diversity, community structure and composition, and pathogenicity of isolated bacteria. Our results indicated that the composition of the endophytic microbiota underwent a shift during the progression of rhizome rot disease. , , and the bacterial genera , , , , , , and were relatively abundant in the bacterial community of rhizomes exhibiting bacterial decay symptoms but were also present in asymptomatic rhizomes. The presence of and were positively correlated ( = 0.83) at the beginning of the sampling period in the symptomatic group, while a positive correlation ( = 0.89) was only observed after 20 days in the asymptomatic group. These data indicate that the co-occurrence of and may be associated with the development of ginger rot. Bacterial taxa isolated from ginger rhizomes, such as , , and , induced obvious rot symptoms when they were inoculated on ginger rhizomes. Notably, antibiotic-producing bacterial taxa in the and were also relatively abundant in rhizomes with rot and appeared to be linked to the onset of rhizome rot disease. Our results provide important information on the establishment and management of disease in ginger rhizomes.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-09-21-2069-RE | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!