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Diversity of Bacterial Communities that Colonize the Filter Units Used for Controlling Plant Pathogens in Soilless Cultures
Authors:David?Renault  Jessica?Vallance  Franck?Déniel  Nathalie?Wery  Jean?Jacques?Godon  Georges?Barbier  Patrice?ReyEmail author
Affiliation:1.Laboratoire Universitaire de Biodiversité et Ecologie Microbienne, ESMISAB,Université Européenne de Bretagne/Université de Brest,Plouzané,France;2.Laboratoire de Biotechnologie de l’Environnement,INRA,Narbonne,France;3.UMR Santé et Agroécologie du Vignoble 1065 INRA/ENITA de Bordeaux,Université de Bordeaux,Gradignan,France
Abstract:In recent years, increasing the level of suppressiveness by the addition of antagonistic bacteria in slow filters has become a promising strategy to control plant pathogens in the recycled solutions used in soilless cultures. However, knowledge about the microflora that colonize the filtering columns is still limited. In order to get information on this issue, the present study was carried out over a 4-year period and includes filters inoculated or not with suppressive bacteria at the start of the filtering process (two or three filters were used each year). After 9 months of filtration, polymerase chain reaction (PCR)–single strand conformation polymorphism analyses point out that, for the same year of experiment, the bacterial communities from control filters were relatively similar but that they were significantly different between the bacteria-amended and control filters. To characterize the changes in bacterial communities within the filters, this microflora was studied by quantitative PCR, community-level physiological profiles, and sequencing 16SrRNA clone libraries (filters used in year 1). Quantitative PCR evidenced a denser bacterial colonization of the P-filter (amended with Pseudomonas putida strains) than control and B-filter (amended with Bacillus cereus strains). Functional analysis focused on the cultivable bacterial communities pointed out that bacteria from the control filter metabolized more carbohydrates than those from the amended filters whose trophic behaviors were more targeted towards carboxylic acids and amino acids. The bacterial communities in P- and B-filters both exhibited significantly more phylotype diversity and markedly distinct phylogenetic compositions than those in the C-filter. Although there were far fewer Proteobacteria in B- and P-filters than in the C-filter (22% and 22% rather than 69% of sequences, respectively), the percentages of Firmicutes was much higher (44% and 55% against 9%, respectively). Many Pseudomonas species were also found in the bacterial communities of the control filter. The persistence of the amended suppressive-bacteria in the filters is discussed with regards to the management of suppressive microflora in soilless culture.
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