Disease suppression is driven by microbial community properties at fine taxonomic scales

Shan Shan, Isabelle George, Michael D Millican, Linda L. Kinkel, Richard A. Lankau

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The soil microbiome provides essential services in agroecosystems that can increase plant health and productivity, such as disease suppression and growth promotion. A small number of microbial groups have been proposed as main players behind disease suppression, but the complete picture of the underlying mechanisms remains unclear for both functions in many soil systems. Here, we investigated broad and fine-scale microbial community features for their contributions to disease suppression and growth promotion for potato plants. In a greenhouse study, we grew potato plants in pots sharing a common background soil and inoculated with living soil microbial communities with or without a separate inoculation with Streptomyces scabiei, the causal agent of potato common scab disease. The suppression of common scab and growth promotion abilities of a variety of soil microbial communities were estimated and related to quantitative patterns in microbial community structure. We found that suppression of common scab was mostly driven by fine-scale microbial community features, especially the diversity within the Actinomycetota phylum. Even though opposing components of microbial community structure might be related to the two functions, disease suppression did not cause a negative trade-off in growth promotion. This suggests high functional redundancy in growth promotion. It may be possible to improve the multi-functionality of soil microbial communities by engineering the communities toward optimized disease suppression and growth promotion ability.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere70104
JournalEcosphere
Volume15
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Ecosphere published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Ecological Society of America.

Keywords

  • common scab
  • disease suppression
  • growth promotion
  • microbial community
  • microbial diversity
  • potato
  • soil function
  • soil-borne pathogen

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