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Annulment of Bacterial Antagonism Improves Plant Beneficial Activity of a Bacillus velezensis Consortium

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Bacillus velezensis is one of the most widely applied bacteria in biofertilizers in China and Europe. Additionally, the molecular mechanisms of plant growth promotion and disease suppression by representative model… Click to show full abstract

Bacillus velezensis is one of the most widely applied bacteria in biofertilizers in China and Europe. Additionally, the molecular mechanisms of plant growth promotion and disease suppression by representative model strains are well established, such as B. velezensis SQR9 and FZB42. ABSTRACT Bacillus sp. strains that are beneficial to plants are widely used in commercial biofertilizers and biocontrol agents for sustainable agriculture. Generally, functional Bacillus strains are applied as single-strain communities since the principles of synthetic microbial consortia constructed with Bacillus strains remain largely unclear. Here, we demonstrated that the mutual compatibility directly affects the survival and function of two-member consortia composed of Bacillus velezensis SQR9 and FZB42 in the rhizosphere. A mutation in the global regulator Spo0A of SQR9 markedly reduced the boundary phenotype (appearance of a visible boundary line at the meeting point of two swarms) with wild-type FZB42, and the combined use of the SQR9(△spo0A) mutant and FZB42 improved biofilm formation, root colonization, and the production of secondary metabolites that are beneficial to plants. Furthermore, alleviation of antagonistic interactions of two-member Bacillus consortia improved its beneficial effects to cucumber in a greenhouse experiment. Our results provide evidence that social interactions among bacteria could be an influencing factor for achieving a desired community-level function. IMPORTANCE Bacillus velezensis is one of the most widely applied bacteria in biofertilizers in China and Europe. Additionally, the molecular mechanisms of plant growth promotion and disease suppression by representative model strains are well established, such as B. velezensis SQR9 and FZB42. However, it remains extremely challenging to design efficient consortia based on these model strains. Here, we showed that swarm encounter phenotype is one of the major determinants that affects the performance of two-member Bacillus consortia in vitro and in the rhizosphere. Deletion in global regulatory gene spo0A of SQR9 reduced the strength of boundary formation with FZB42 and resulted in the improved plant growth promotion performance of the dual consortium. This knowledge provides new insights into efficient probiotics consortia design in Bacillus spp.

Keywords: fzb42; bacillus; velezensis; sqr9; plant; bacillus velezensis

Journal Title: Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Year Published: 2022

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