Seed phytochemicals shape the community structures of cultivable actinobacteria-inhabiting plant interiors of Thai pigmented rice.
Nareeluk NakaewRungroch SungthongPublished in: MicrobiologyOpen (2018)
We examined abundance, bioactivity, and endophytism of cultivable actinobacteria isolated from plant interiors of two Thai pigmented rice cultivars: Hom Nin (HN) rice and Luem Pua (LP) glutinous rice. Both rice cultivars housed the same amount of endophytic actinobacteria (33 isolates each). Microbispora (76%) and Streptomyces (73%) were the predominant endophytic actinobacteria of LP glutinous rice and HN rice, respectively. Sphaerisporangium (9%) was found only in LP glutinous rice. Twelve percent of endophytic actinobacteria was the possibility of discovering novel species from both rice cultivars. Most endophytic actinobacteria exhibited plant growth-promoting potentials, including antimicrobial activity against test bacteria and phytopathogenic fungi, solubilization of phosphate, and production of biostimulants (i.e., ammonia, indole-3-acetic acid, and siderophore) and biocatalysts (i.e., amylase, cellulase, chitinase, lipase, and protease). Our findings revealed that seed phytochemicals of pigmented rice (e.g., anthocyanin, γ-oryzanol, phytate, antioxidants, and content of amylose) were effectors, shaping the community structures and biofunctions of endophytic actinobacteria. We conclude that pigmented rice is yet a challenging source for discovery of bioactive and novel actinobacteria. This study also provides new insights into the plant-endophyte interactions by which seed phytochemicals act as a primary checkpoint in the natural selection for establishing unique plant endophytomes.