6 research outputs found

    Soil Humic Acid Stimulates Potentially Active Dissimilatory Arsenate-Reducing Bacteria in Flooded Paddy Soil as Revealed by Metagenomic Stable Isotope Probing

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    Dissimilatory arsenate reduction contributes a large proportion of arsenic flux from flooded paddy soil, which is closely linked to soil organic carbon input and efflux. Humic acid (HA) represents a natural ingredient in soil and is shown to enhance microbial arsenate respiration to promote arsenic mobility. However, the community and function profiles of metabolically active arsenate-respiring bacteria and their interactions with HA in paddy soil remain unclear. To probe this linkage, we performed a genome-centric comparison of potentially active arsenate-respiring bacteria in anaerobic microcosms amended with 13C-lactate and HA by combining stable-isotope probing with genome-resolved metagenomics. Indeed, HA greatly accelerated the microbial reduction of arsenate to arsenite. Enrichment of bacteria that harbor arsenate-respiring reductase genes (arrA) in HA-enriched 13C-DNA was confirmed by metagenomic binning, which are affiliated with Firmicutes (mainly Desulfitobacterium, Bacillus, Brevibacillus, and Clostridia) and Acidobacteria. Characterization of reference extracellular electron transfer (EET)-related genes in these arrA-harboring bacteria supports the presence of EET-like genes, with partial electron-transport chain genes identified. This suggests that Gram-positive Firmicutes- and Acidobacteria-related members may harbor unspecified EET-associated genes involved in metal reduction. Our findings highlight the link between soil HA and potentially active arsenate-respiring bacteria, which can be considered when using HA for arsenic removal

    Soil Humic Acid Stimulates Potentially Active Dissimilatory Arsenate-Reducing Bacteria in Flooded Paddy Soil as Revealed by Metagenomic Stable Isotope Probing

    No full text
    Dissimilatory arsenate reduction contributes a large proportion of arsenic flux from flooded paddy soil, which is closely linked to soil organic carbon input and efflux. Humic acid (HA) represents a natural ingredient in soil and is shown to enhance microbial arsenate respiration to promote arsenic mobility. However, the community and function profiles of metabolically active arsenate-respiring bacteria and their interactions with HA in paddy soil remain unclear. To probe this linkage, we performed a genome-centric comparison of potentially active arsenate-respiring bacteria in anaerobic microcosms amended with 13C-lactate and HA by combining stable-isotope probing with genome-resolved metagenomics. Indeed, HA greatly accelerated the microbial reduction of arsenate to arsenite. Enrichment of bacteria that harbor arsenate-respiring reductase genes (arrA) in HA-enriched 13C-DNA was confirmed by metagenomic binning, which are affiliated with Firmicutes (mainly Desulfitobacterium, Bacillus, Brevibacillus, and Clostridia) and Acidobacteria. Characterization of reference extracellular electron transfer (EET)-related genes in these arrA-harboring bacteria supports the presence of EET-like genes, with partial electron-transport chain genes identified. This suggests that Gram-positive Firmicutes- and Acidobacteria-related members may harbor unspecified EET-associated genes involved in metal reduction. Our findings highlight the link between soil HA and potentially active arsenate-respiring bacteria, which can be considered when using HA for arsenic removal

    Water Management Alters Cadmium Isotope Fractionation between Shoots and Nodes/Leaves in a Soil-Rice System

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    The drainage of rice soils increases Cd solubility and results in high Cd concentrations in rice grains. However, plant Cd uptake is limited by sorption to iron plaques, and Cd redistribution in the plant is regulated by the nodes. To better understand the interplay of Cd uptake and redistribution in rice under drained and flooded conditions, we determined stable Cd isotope ratios and the expression of genes coding transporters that can transport Cd into the plant cells in a pot experiment. In soil, both water management practices showed similar patterns of isotope variation: the soil solution was enriched in heavy isotopes, and the root Fe plaque was enriched in light isotopes. In rice, the leaves were heavier (Δ114/110Cdleaf‑shoot = 0.17 to 0.96‰) and the nodes were moderately lighter (Δ114/110Cdnode‑shoot = −0.26 to 0.00‰) relative to the shoots under flooded conditions, indicating preferential retention of light isotopes in nodes and export of heavy isotopes toward leaves. This is generally reversed under drained conditions (Δ114/110Cdleaf‑shoot = −0.25 to −0.04‰, Δ114/110Cdnode‑shoot = 0.10 to 0.19‰). The drained treatment resulted in significantly higher expression of OsHMA2 and OsLCT1 (phloem loading) but lower expression of OsHMA3 (vacuolar sequestration) in nodes and flag leaves relative to the flooded treatment. It appeared that OsHMA2 and OsLCT1 might preferentially transport isotopically heavier Cd, and the excess Cd was purposefully retranslocated via the phloem under drained conditions when the vacuoles could not retain more Cd. Cd in seeds was isotopically heavier than that in stems under both water management practices, indicating that heavy isotopes were preferentially transferred toward seeds via the phloem, leaving light isotopes retained in stems. These findings demonstrate that the Fe plaque preferentially adsorbs and occludes light Cd isotopes on the root surface, and distinct water management practices alter the gene expression of key transporters in the nodes, which corresponds to a change in isotope fractionation between shoots and nodes/leaves

    Source and Strategy of Iron Uptake by Rice Grown in Flooded and Drained Soils: Insights from Fe Isotope Fractionation and Gene Expression

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    Rice can simultaneously absorb Fe2+ via a strategy I-like system and Fe­(III)-phytosiderophore via strategy II from soil. Still, it remains unclear which strategy and source of Fe dominate under distinct water conditions. An isotope signature combined with gene expression was employed to evaluate Fe uptake and transport in a soil–rice system under flooded and drained conditions. Rice of flooded treatment revealed a similar δ56Fe value to that of soils (Δ56Ferice–soil = 0.05‰), while that of drained treatment was lighter than that of the soils (Δ56Ferice–soil = −0.41‰). Calculations indicated that 70.4% of Fe in rice was from Fe plaque under flooded conditions, while Fe was predominantly from soil solution under drained conditions. Up-regulated expression of OsNAAT1, OsTOM2, and OsYSL15 was observed in the root of flooded treatment, while higher expression of OsIRT1 was observed in the drained treatment. These isotopic and genetic results suggested that the Fe­(III)–DMA uptake from Fe plaque and Fe2+ uptake from soil solution dominated under flooded and drained conditions, respectively

    Roles of Chloride and Sulfate Ions in Controlling Cadmium Transport in a Soil-Rice System as Evidenced by the Cd Isotope Fingerprint

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    Anions accompanying inorganic fertilizers, such as chloride and sulfate ions, potentially affect the solubility, uptake, and transport of Cd to rice grains. However, the role of anions in controlling Cd transport in the soil–soil solution–Fe plaque–rice plant continuum remains poorly understood. Cd isotope ratios were applied to Cd-contaminated soil pots, hydroponic rice, and adsorption experiments with or without KCl and K2SO4 treatments to decipher transport processes in the complex soil–rice system. The chloride and sulfate ions increased the Cd concentrations in the soil solution, Fe plaque, and rice plants. Accordingly, the magnitude of positive fractionation from soil to the soil solution was less pronounced, but that between soil and Fe plaque or rice plant is barely varied. The similar isotope composition of Fe plaque and soil, and the similar fractionation magnitude between Fe plaque and the solution and between goethite and the solution, suggested that desorption-sorption between iron oxides and the solution could be important at the soil–soil solution–Fe plaque continuum. This study reveals the roles of chloride and sulfate ions: (i) induce the mobility of light Cd isotopes from soil to the soil solution, (ii) chloro-Cd and sulfato-Cd complexes contribute to Cd immobilization in the Fe plaque and uptake into roots, and (iii) facilitate second leaves/node II-to-grain Cd transport within shoots. These results provide insights into the anion-induced Cd isotope effect in the soil–rice system and the roles of anions in facilitating Cd migration and transformation

    Impact of Flooding–Drainage Alternation on Fe Uptake and Transport in Rice: Novel Insights from Iron Isotopes

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    Iron (Fe) isotopes were utilized to provide insights into the temporal changes underlying Fe uptake and translocation during rice growth (tillering, jointing, flowering, and maturity stages) in soil–rice systems under typical flooding–drainage alternation. Fe isotopic composition (δ56Fe values) of the soil solution generally decreased at vegetative stages in flooding regimes but increased during grain-filling. Fe plaques were the prevalent source of Fe uptake, as indicated by the concurrent increase in the δ56Fe values of Fe plaques and rice plants during rice growth. The increasing fractionation magnitude from stem/nodes I to flag leaves can be attributed to the preferred phloem transport of light isotopes toward grains, particularly during grain-filling. This study demonstrates that rice plants take up heavy Fe isotopes from Fe plaque and soil solution via strategy II during flooding and the subsequent drainage period, respectively, thereby providing valuable insights into improving the nutritional quality during rice production
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