AI Article Synopsis

  • Low phosphorus availability in acidic soils limits the growth of legumes like soybeans, but improvement can come from either phosphorus fertilization or arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) application.
  • In a study, AMF inoculation significantly increased the biomass of a high phosphorus-efficient transgenic soybean (PT6) by up to 65.22%, while a low phosphorus-efficient soybean (NY-1001) showed little growth enhancement from either treatment.
  • Soil microbiome analysis revealed a positive correlation between nitrogen-fixing bacteria and phosphorus-solubilizing bacteria, with some pathogenic fungi also interacting with these microbes, highlighting the complex relationships in the soil ecosystem.

Article Abstract

The low phosphorus (P) availability of acidic soils severely limits leguminous plant growth and productivity. Improving the soil P nutritional status can be achieved by increasing the P-content through P-fertilization or stimulating the mineralization of organic P via arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) application; however, their corresponding impacts on plant and soil microbiome still remain to be explored. Here, we examined the effects of AMF-inoculation and P-fertilization on the growth of soybean with different P-efficiencies, as well as the composition of rhizo-microbiome in an acidic soil. The growth of recipient soybean NY-1001, which has a lower P-efficiency, was not significantly enhanced by AMF-inoculation or P-fertilization. However, the plant biomass of higher P-efficiency transgenic soybean PT6 was significantly increased by 46.74%-65.22% through AMF-inoculation. Although there was no discernible difference in plant biomass between PT6 and NY-1001 in the absence of AMF-inoculation and P-fertilization, PT6 had approximately 1.9-2.5 times the plant biomass of NY-1001 after AMF-inoculation. Therefore, the growth advantage of higher P-efficiency soybean was achieved through the assistance of AMF rather than P-fertilization in available P-deficient acidic soil. Most nitrogen (N)-fixing bacteria and some functional genes related to N-fixation were abundant in endospheric layer, as were the P-solubilizing , and annotated P-metabolism genes. These N-fixing and P-solubilizing bacteria were positive correlated with each other. Lastly, the two most abundant phytopathogenic fungi species accumulated in endospheric layer, they exhibited positive correlations with N-fixing bacteria, but displayed negative interactions with the majority of the other dominant non-pathogenic genera with potential antagonistic activity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11079484PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhae067DOI Listing

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