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Plants Rather than Mineral Fertilization Shape Microbial Community Structure and Functional Potential in Legacy Contaminated Soil

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    0473008 - ÚMG 2017 RIV CH eng J - Journal Article
    Rídl, Jakub - Kolář, Michal - Strejček, M. - Strnad, Hynek - Štursa, P. - Pačes, Jan - Macek, T. - Uhlík, O.
    Plants Rather than Mineral Fertilization Shape Microbial Community Structure and Functional Potential in Legacy Contaminated Soil.
    Frontiers in Microbiology. Roč. 7, JUN 24 (2016), č. článku 995. ISSN 1664-302X. E-ISSN 1664-302X
    R&D Projects: GA ČR GA13-28283S
    Institutional support: RVO:68378050
    Keywords : microbial community structure * plants * fertilization * contaminated soil * functional potential
    Subject RIV: EB - Genetics ; Molecular Biology
    Impact factor: 4.076, year: 2016

    Plant-microbe interactions are of particular importance in polluted soils. This study sought to determine how selected plants (horseradish, black nightshade and tobacco) and NPK mineral fertilization shape the structure of soil microbial communities in legacy contaminated soil and the resultant impact of treatment on the soil microbial community functional potential. To explore these objectives, we combined shotgun metagenomics and 16S rRNA gene amplicon high throughput sequencing with data analysis approaches developed for RNA-seq. We observed that the presence of any of the selected plants rather than fertilization shaped the microbial community structure, and the microbial populations of the root zone of each plant significantly differed from one another and/or from the bulk soil, whereas the effect of the fertilizer proved to be insignificant. When we compared microbial diversity in root zones versus bulk soil, we observed an increase in the relative abundance of Alphaproteobacteria, Betaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria or Bacteroidetes, taxa which are commonly considered copiotrophic. Our results thus align with the theory that fast-growing, copiotrophic, microorganisms which are adapted to ephemeral carbon inputs are enriched in the vegetated soil. Microbial functional potential indicated that some genetic determinants associated with signal transduction mechanisms, defense mechanisms or amino acid transport and metabolism differed significantly among treatments. Genetic determinants of these categories tend to be overrepresented in copiotrophic organisms. The results of our study further elucidate plant-microbe relationships in a contaminated environment with possible implications for the phyto/rhizoremediation of contaminated areas.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0270183

     
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