Silicate fertilization improves microbial functional potentials for stress tolerance in arsenic-enriched rice cropping systems
- Authors
- Das, Suvendu; Kim, Gil Won; Lee, Jeong Gu; Bhuiyan, Mohammad Saiful Islam; Kim, Pil Joo
- Issue Date
- 5-Sep-2021
- Publisher
- Elsevier BV
- Keywords
- Silicon fertilization; Stress resistant gene; Rhizosphere microbiome; Plant traits
- Citation
- Journal of Hazardous Materials, v.417
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Journal of Hazardous Materials
- Volume
- 417
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/3272
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.125953
- ISSN
- 0304-3894
1873-3336
- Abstract
- The host plant and its rhizosphere microbiome are similarly exposed to abiotic stresses under arsenic (As)enriched cropping systems. Since silicon (Si) fertilization is effective in alleviating As-induced stresses in plants, and plant-microbe interactions are tightly coupled, we hypothesized that Si-fertilization would improve soil microbial functional potentials to environmental stress tolerance, which was not yet studied. With the help of high throughput metagenome, microarray and analyzing plant impacts on soil microbiome and the environment, we tested the hypothesis in two geographically different rice (i.e., Japonica and Indica) grown on As-enriched soils. Silicate fertilization in rice grown on As-enriched soils altered rhizosphere bacterial communities and increased several commensal microorganisms and their genetic potential to tolerate oxidative stress, osmotic stress, oxygen limitation, nitrogen and phosphate limitation, heat and cold shock, and radiation stress. The stress resistant microbial communities shifted with the changes in rhizosphere nutrient flows and cumulative plant impacts on the soil environment. The study highlights a thus-far unexplored behavior of Si-fertilization to improve microbial stress resilience under As-laden cropping systems and opens up a promising avenue to further study how commonalities in plant-microbe signaling in response to Si-fertilization alleviates As-induced stresses in agro-systems.
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