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Conservation tillage and organic farming induce minor variations in Pseudomonas abundance, their antimicrobial function and soil disease resistance
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4605559
Author(s) Dennert, Francesca; Imperiali, Nicola; Staub, Cornelia; Schneider, Jana; Laessle, Titouan; Zhang, Tao; Wittwer, Raphaël; van der Heijden, Marcel G. A.; Smits, Theo H. M.; Schlaeppi, Klaus; Keel, Christoph; Maurhofer, Monika
Author(s) at UniBasel Schläppi, Klaus
Year 2018
Title Conservation tillage and organic farming induce minor variations in Pseudomonas abundance, their antimicrobial function and soil disease resistance
Journal FEMS microbiology ecology
Volume 94
Number 8
Pages / Article-Number fiy075
Mesh terms Antibiosis, physiology; Antiparasitic Agents, metabolism; Disease Resistance, physiology; Farms; Microbiota; Organic Agriculture, methods; Plant Diseases, parasitology, prevention & control; Plant Roots, microbiology; Pseudomonas, genetics, isolation & purification, metabolism; Pythium, drug effects; RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, genetics; Soil, chemistry; Soil Microbiology; Triticum, microbiology, parasitology
Abstract Conservation tillage and organic farming are strategies used worldwide to preserve the stability and fertility of soils. While positive effects on soil structure have been extensively reported, the effects on specific root- and soil-associated microorganisms are less known. The aim of this study was to investigate how conservation tillage and organic farming influence the frequency and activity of plant-beneficial pseudomonads. Amplicon sequencing using the 16S rRNA gene revealed that Pseudomonas is among the most abundant bacterial taxa in the root microbiome of field-grown wheat, independent of agronomical practices. However, pseudomonads carrying genes required for the biosynthesis of specific antimicrobial compounds were enriched in samples from conventionally farmed plots without tillage. In contrast, disease resistance tests indicated that soil from conventional no tillage plots is less resistant to the soilborne pathogen Pythium ultimum compared to soil from organic reduced tillage plots, which exhibited the highest resistance of all compared cropping systems. Reporter strain-based gene expression assays did not reveal any differences in Pseudomonas antimicrobial gene expression between soils from different cropping systems. Our results suggest that plant-beneficial pseudomonads can be favoured by certain soil cropping systems, but soil resistance against plant diseases is likely determined by a multitude of biotic factors in addition to Pseudomonas.
Publisher Oxford University Press
ISSN/ISBN 0168-6496 ; 1574-6941
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/79066/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1093/femsec/fiy075
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29701793
ISI-Number WOS:000441198800004
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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