Deciphering Microbial Community and Nitrogen Fixation in the Legume Rhizosphere.
Yaohui YangNuohan XuZhenyan ZhangChaotang LeiBingfeng ChenGuoyan QinDanyan QiuTao LuHaifeng QianPublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2024)
Nitrogen is the most limiting factor in crop production. Legumes establish a symbiotic relationship with rhizobia and enhance nitrogen fixation. We analyzed 1,624 rhizosphere 16S rRNA gene samples and 113 rhizosphere metagenomic samples from three typical legumes and three non-legumes. The rhizosphere microbial community of the legumes had low diversity and was enriched with nitrogen-cycling bacteria ( Sphingomonadaceae , Xanthobacteraceae , Rhizobiaceae , and Bacillaceae ). Furthermore, the rhizosphere microbiota of legumes exhibited a high abundance of nitrogen-fixing genes, reflecting a stronger nitrogen-fixing potential, and Streptomycetaceae and Nocardioidaceae were the predominant nitrogen-fixing bacteria. We also identified helper bacteria and confirmed through metadata analysis and a pot experiment that the synthesis of riboflavin by helper bacteria is the key factor in promoting nitrogen fixation. Our study emphasizes that the construction of synthetic communities of nitrogen-fixing bacteria and helper bacteria is crucial for the development of efficient nitrogen-fixing microbial fertilizers.