Growth-promoting effects of self-selected microbial community on wheat seedlings in saline-alkali soil environments

Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2024 Dec 13:12:1464195. doi: 10.3389/fbioe.2024.1464195. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Saline-alkali land is a type of soil environment that causes poor crop growth and low yields. Its management and utilization are, therefore of great significance for increasing arable land resources, ensuring food security, and enhancing agricultural production capacity. The application of plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) is an effective way to promote the establishment of symbiotic relationships between plants and the rhizosphere microenvironment, plant growth and development, and plant resistance to saline-alkali stress. In this study, multiple saline-alkali-resistant bacteria were screened from a saline-alkali land environment and some of them were found to have significantly promotive effects on the growth of wheat seedlings under saline-alkali stress. Using these PGPR, a compound microbial community was selectively obtained from the root-zone soil environment of wheat seedlings, and the metagenomic sequencing analysis of wheat root-zone soil microbiomes was performed. As a result, a compound microbial agent with a Kocuria dechangensis 5-33:Rossellomorea aquimaris S-3:Bacillus subtilis BJYX:Bacillus velezensis G51-1 ratio of 275:63:5:1 was obtained through the self-selection of wheat seedlings. The synthetic compound microbial agent significantly improved the growth of wheat seedlings in saline-alkali soil, as the physiological plant height, aboveground and underground fresh weights, and aboveground and underground dry weights of 21-day-old wheat seedlings were increased by 27.39% (p < 0.01), 147.33% (p < 0.01), 282.98% (p < 0.01), 194.86% (p < 0.01), and 218.60% (p < 0.01), respectively. The promoting effect of this compound microbial agent was also greater than that of each strain on the growth of wheat seedlings. This microbial agent could also regulate some enzyme activities of wheat seedlings and the saline-alkali soil, thereby, promoting the growth of these seedlings. In this study, we analyze an efficient microbial agent and the theoretical basis for promoting the growth of wheat seedlings under saline-alkali stress, thereby, suggesting an important solution for the management and utilization of saline-alkali land.

Keywords: metagenome; plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria; saline-alkali soil environment; the rhizosphere microenvironment; wheat.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was funded by Shandong Provincial Key Research and Development Program (Boost Plan for Rural Vitalization Science and Technology Innovation) (No. 2023TZXD003), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (32170133, 31700094, U23A20143, and 32070031), Shandong Provincial Key Research and Development Program (Major Science and Technology Innovation Project) - Boost Plan for Rural Vitalization Science and Technology Innovation (No. 2021TZXD001), State Key Laboratory for Managing Biotic and Chemical Treats to the Quality and Safety of Agro-products (No. 2021DG700024-KF202314), and the State Key Laboratory of Microbial Technology Open Projects Fund (No. M2023-11).