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      Case study of a rhizosphere microbiome assay on a bamboo rhizome with excessive shoots

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          Abstract

          Young moso bamboo shoots are a popular seasonal food and an important source of income for farmers, with value for cultivation estimated at $30,000 per hectare. Bamboo also has great environmental importance and its unique physiology is of scientific interest. A rare and valuable phenomenon has recently appeared where a large number of adjacent buds within a single moso bamboo rhizome have grown into shoots. Although of practical importance for the production of edible shoots, such occurrences have not been scientifically studied, due to their rarity. Analysis of collected reports from enhanced shoot production events in China showed no evidence that enhanced shoot development was heritable. We report the analysis of the rhizosphere microbiome from a rhizome with 18 shoots, compared to rhizomes having one or no shoots as controls. The community of prokaryotes, but not fungi, correlated with the shoot number. Burkholderia was the most abundant genus, which was negatively correlated with rhizome shoot number, while Clostridia and Ktedonobacteria were positively correlated. Two Burkholderia strains were isolated and their plant-growth promoting activity was tested. The isolated Burkholderia strains attenuated the growth of bamboo seedlings. These data provide the first study on excessive shoot development in bamboo, which will facilitate hypothesis building for future studies.

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          QIIME allows analysis of high-throughput community sequencing data.

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            Metagenomic biomarker discovery and explanation

            This study describes and validates a new method for metagenomic biomarker discovery by way of class comparison, tests of biological consistency and effect size estimation. This addresses the challenge of finding organisms, genes, or pathways that consistently explain the differences between two or more microbial communities, which is a central problem to the study of metagenomics. We extensively validate our method on several microbiomes and a convenient online interface for the method is provided at http://huttenhower.sph.harvard.edu/lefse/.
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              UPARSE: highly accurate OTU sequences from microbial amplicon reads.

              Amplified marker-gene sequences can be used to understand microbial community structure, but they suffer from a high level of sequencing and amplification artifacts. The UPARSE pipeline reports operational taxonomic unit (OTU) sequences with ≤1% incorrect bases in artificial microbial community tests, compared with >3% incorrect bases commonly reported by other methods. The improved accuracy results in far fewer OTUs, consistently closer to the expected number of species in a community.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                For Res (Fayettev)
                forres
                Forestry Research
                Maximum Academic Press (USA )
                2767-3812
                2021
                24 June 2021
                : 1
                : 10
                Affiliations
                [1 ] State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Silviculture, Zhejiang A&F University, Lin’an 311300, Hangzhou, China
                [2 ] School of Agricultural Engineering, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang 212013, China
                [3 ] Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Program, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, and the Viikki Plant Science Centre, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 65 (Viikinkaari 1), FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland
                [4 ] Key Laboratory of Plant Stress Biology, School of Life Sciences, Henan University, Kaifeng 475004, China
                [5 ] Weifang Inspection and Testing Center, Weifang 261100, China
                Author notes
                Article
                FR-2021-0010
                10.48130/FR-2021-0010
                11524271
                42bc2baf-5e8c-4fb0-9868-8b2ac79fdf72
                Copyright @ 2021

                Copyright: © 2021 by the author(s). Published by Maximum Academic Press, Fayetteville, GA. This article is an open access article distributed under Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

                History
                : 25 December 2020
                : 7 June 2021
                Funding
                Funded by: Qianjiang Talent D program to FC;
                Funded by: National Natural Science Foundation of China;
                Funded by: Zhejiang Science and Technology Major Program on Agricultural New Variety Breeding;
                Funded by: Changjiang Scholars and Innovative Research Team in University;
                Funded by: Academy of Finland Center of Excellence in Primary Producer;
                Categories
                Article

                bamboo,rhizosphere,microbial diversity,burkholderia,shoot clusters

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