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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Microbiol., 21 April 2021
Sec. Terrestrial Microbiology

Elevated Atmospheric CO2 and Nitrogen Fertilization Affect the Abundance and Community Structure of Rice Root-Associated Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria

\r\nJumei Liu,,&#x;Jumei Liu1,2,3†Jingjing Han&#x;Jingjing Han1†Chunwu ZhuChunwu Zhu4Weiwei Cao,Weiwei Cao1,4Ying LuoYing Luo1Meng ZhangMeng Zhang1Shaohua ZhangShaohua Zhang1Zhongjun JiaZhongjun Jia4Ruihong Yu,Ruihong Yu1,2Ji Zhao,Ji Zhao1,2Zhihua Bao,*Zhihua Bao1,2*
  • 1Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Ecology and Resource Use of the Mongolian Plateau and Inner Mongolia Key Laboratory of Grassland Ecology, School of Ecology and Environment, Inner Mongolia University, Hohhot, China
  • 2Inner Mongolia Key Laboratory of Environmental Pollution Control and Waste Resource Reuse, Inner Mongolia University, Hohhot, China
  • 3Chongqing Key Laboratory of Environmental Materials and Remediation Technologies, College of Chemistry and Environmental Engineering, Chongqing University of Arts and Sciences, Chongqing, China
  • 4State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture, Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing, China

Elevated atmospheric CO2 (eCO2) results in plant growth and N limitation, yet how root-associated nitrogen-fixing bacterial communities respond to increasing atmospheric CO2 and nitrogen fertilization (eN) during the growth stages of rice is unclear. Using the nifH gene as a molecular marker, we studied the combined effect of eCO2 and eN on the diazotrophic community and abundance at two growth stages in rice (tillering, TI and heading, HI). Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) showed that eN had no obvious effect on nifH abundance in rice roots under either ambient CO2 (aCO2) or eCO2 treatment at the TI stage; in contrast, at the HI, nifH copy numbers were increased under eCO2 and decreased under aCO2. For rhizosphere soils, eN significantly reduced the abundance of nifH under both aCO2 and eCO2 treatment at the HI stage. Elevated CO2 significantly increased the nifH abundance in rice roots and rhizosphere soils with nitrogen fertilization, but had no obvious effect without N addition at the HI stage. There was a significant interaction [CO2 × N fertilization] effect on nifH abundance in root zone at the HI stage. In addition, the nifH copy numbers in rice roots were significantly higher at the HI stage than at the TI stage. Sequencing analysis indicated that the root-associated diazotrophic community structure tended to cluster according to the nitrogen fertilization treatment and that Rhizobiales were the dominant diazotrophs in all root samples at the HI stage. Additionally, nitrogen fertilization significantly increased the relative abundance of Methylosinus (Methylocystaceae) under eCO2 treatment, but significantly decreased the relative abundance of Rhizobium (Rhizobiaceae) under aCO2 treatment. Overall, the combined effect of eN and eCO2 stimulates root-associated diazotrophic methane-oxidizing bacteria while inhibits heterotrophic diazotrophs.

Introduction

Rice is the most important staple food for half the world’s population, and nearly 90% of the rice fields in the world are located in Asia (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2002). Rice fields act as an important carbon and nitrogen cycling interface between the atmosphere and land (Ishii et al., 2011; Tokida et al., 2011). Carbon dioxide (CO2) fixation by photosynthesis provides energy for rice plants. Atmospheric CO2 concentrations have increased from approximately 270–400 ppm by human activity since preindustrial times (IPCC, 2013). Elevated concentrations of atmospheric CO2 under a free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE) system could increase the biomass, yield and grain quality of rice plants (Usui et al., 2014; Zhu et al., 2015). Elevated CO2 (eCO2) can variously influence underground nutrient cycling, which is mainly mediated by microbial communities (García-Palacios et al., 2015). For example, CH4 emissions were significantly increased by eCO2 and/or temperatures in rice paddies (Tokida et al., 2011; Xie et al., 2012) due to the effects of methanogens and methanotrophs (Das and Adhya, 2012). CH4 generated in soil diffuses into rice roots, transported to the shoot via aerenchyma, and finally released from micropores in the leaf sheaths (Nouchi et al., 1990). The root zone (rice root and rhizosphere soil) was previously shown to be the main area CH4 oxidation in rice paddies (Bosse and Frenzel, 1997). A previous study reported that CH4 oxidation and N2 fixation were simultaneously activated in the root zone (root and rhizosphere soil) of wild-type rice in the low nitrogen field (Bao et al., 2014b). Further, 15N-N2 feeding experiments and metaproteomics analysis demonstrated that Methylosinus was a core diazotroph in rice roots and likely contributed to both CH4 oxidation and N2 fixation processes (Bao et al., 2014a; Shinoda et al., 2019). Bradyrhizobium and/or Methylosinus were frequently detected in rice roots using metagenomic analysis (Eller and Frenzel, 2001; Ikeda et al., 2014), and they were affected by the rice growth stage under eCO2, based on 16S rRNA gene analysis (Okubo et al., 2014). eCO2 quantitatively changed the release of labile sugars, organic acids, and amino acids from plant roots (Bhattacharyya et al., 2013), possibly influencing the activity of rhizospheric and root-associated microbes.

In rice production, nitrogen is often a limiting factor. Supplementation with N fertilizer has increased rice grain yields over recent decades (Yang et al., 2006). However, the heavy use of N fertilizers causes various environmental impacts, such as nitrous oxide emissions, soil and water body N deposition, reactive N leaching, eutrophication and methane emissions (Ju et al., 2009). Thus, the impacts of nitrogen input on methane emissions and methane cycling bacteria, including methanotrophs and methanogens, have attracted worldwide attention (Shrestha et al., 2010; Banger et al., 2012; Bao et al., 2014a,b). N fertilization decreased the relative abundance of root-associated bacteria community, especially type II methanotrophs and Bradyrhizobium (Ikeda et al., 2014). Generally, N fertilizer inputs inhibit N2 fixation and influence the N2-fixing bacterial community (Kumar et al., 2018), which can convert atmospheric N2 gas to ammonium and make it available to plants as a major nutrient (Yoneyama et al., 2019). eCO2 can increase the N demand for plants, which is beneficial for N2 fixation (Luo et al., 2004). A previous study showed that soil diazotrophic abundance significantly increased in two difference rice cultivars to satisfy the increased N demand under eCO2 in paddy fields (Yu et al., 2018). This may be due to an increase in the organic acid content of the root system released into the soil by eCO2 (Bhattacharyya et al., 2013), thus providing carbon source and energy to N2-fixing bacteria. However, plant roots associate with diverse soil-derived microbes including N2-fixing bacteria, which influences plant nutrient uptake (Berendsen et al., 2012; Shinoda et al., 2019). In addition, root-associated microorganism significantly changed between different growth stages in rice paddy field (Chaparro et al., 2014; Okubo et al., 2014). Whether the abundance and community composition of N2-fixing bacteria in the rhizosphere soils and roots of rice are affected by eCO2 and nitrogen fertilization at two different stages during the rice-growing season is unclear, as is which nitrogen fixers respond to these factors.

Using qPCR and MiSeq sequencing techniques, we studied the abundance and community composition of N2-fixing bacteria in the roots of rice plants (japonica rice, WuYunJing) from a free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE) system in Yangzhou city, Jiangsu, China. In this study, we (i) examined the combined effects of eCO2 and N fertilization on the community composition of N2-fixing bacteria in the rice roots and/or rhizosphere at the tillering and heading stages and (ii) identified the N2-fixing bacteria responsive to the treatments. The results will be valuable for understanding the strategies by which root-associated N2-fixing bacterial communities form to adapt to prospective climatic changes.

Materials and Methods

Study Site and Experimental Design

The experimental FACE platform was located in Zongcun Village (119°42′0′E, 32°35′5″N), Yangzhou City, Jiangsu Province (Figure 1; Yu et al., 2018). The long-term experimental platform with a rice-wheat rotation crop system started in 2004. From 2010, the rice-wheat rotation system was changed to a rice-fallow system (Yu et al., 2018). The region has a north subtropical monsoon climate with a mean annual temperature of 16°C and a mean annual precipitation of 900–1,000 mm. The experiment had a split-plot design, with CO2 as the main factor and N fertilization and rice cultivar as the split-plot factors. More details about the FACE system are provided in by Zhu et al. (2016). In brief, three rectangular paddy fields were selected for their uniformity in growth and yield for use in the experiment. Within each field, a FACE plot was paired with an ambient control, and the plot centers were 90 m apart to avoid cross-contamination by CO2 (Heim et al., 2009; Figure 1). The CO2 levels of each FACE ring were maintained with at ambient CO2 (aCO2, 400 ± 10 μmol mol-1) or eCO2 (590 ± 40 μmol mol-1) concentrations corresponding to the future expectations of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2013). Each FACE plot was encircled with an octagonal ring (12.5 m in diameter) equipped with emission tubes surrounding the crops that injected pure CO2 at approximately 50 cm above the crop canopy throughout the day. The target CO2 concentration within the FACE rings was controlled by a real-time CO2 monitoring system (Figure 1). The aCO2 rings did not receive any supplemental CO2.

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. Sampling site diagram of japonica rice WuYunJing from the free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE) system (B,C) in Yangzhou city, Jiangsu, China (119°42′0″E, 32°35′5″N) (A).

There were two N fertilization levels, no N fertilization (aN) and elevated N fertilization (eN) (Figure 1). The eN plots were fertilized with N, P, and K (in the form of N, P2O5, and K2O). In the aN plots, only P and K were applied (in the form of P2O5 and K2O, respectively). P (90 kg ha–1) and K (90 kg ha–1) were applied as basal fertilizers to both aN and eN rice field plots before transplanting. The total nitrogen fertilization rate was 225 kg ha–1, with 40, 30, and 30% of the total amount applied to only eN rice field plots before transplanting, tillering, and heading, respectively (Zhu et al., 2016). The soil in the present study is a Shajiang-Aquic Cambisol soil and has a sandy loam texture (13.7% clay, 28.5% silt, and 57.8% sand). At the beginning of the study, the initial soil properties were analyzed and recorded as follows: soil organic carbon (17.9–18.4 g kg–1 in aCO2 plots and 18.5–18.6 g kg–1 in eCO2 plots), total N (1.6–1.7 g kg–1 in aCO2 plots and 2.01–2.07 g kg–1 in eCO2 plots), total P (0.6 g kg–1 in aCO2 plot and 0.7 g kg–1 in eCO2 plot), total K (13.8 g kg–1 in aCO2 plot and 14.3 g kg–1 in eCO2 plot), available P (8.6 mg kg–1 in aCO2 plot and 11.7 mg kg–1 in eCO2 plot), and available K (66.0 mg kg–1 in aCO2 plot and 75.0 mg kg–1 in eCO2 plot) (see Supplementary Table 1 in the Supplementary Material).

Rice Plant and Soil Sampling

Rice plants (japonica, WuYunJing) with soil blocks were sampled from the aCO2 rings and eCO2 rings. Three plants per experimental plot were harvested on 21 July 2014 (30 d after transplanting, [DAT]), which corresponded to the TI stage (the vegetative stage of rice), and on 25 August 2014 (65 d DAT), which corresponded to the HI stage (the reproductive stage of rice). The samples were immediately transported on ice to the laboratory. The rice roots and rhizosphere soils were sampled as described in previous studies within 1 day after field sampling (Kimura, 2004; Bao et al., 2014a). Briefly, after the rice plants with soil blocks were sampled, the soil blocks, including rice plants, were divided vertically into two equal parts for root collection. Some of the exposed roots were carefully picked from the plants using sterilized forceps and placed into a 50 mL centrifuge tube containing sterile water. The roots were also washed by centrifugation before and after sonication (90 watts for 5–10 min) and the three pellets were combined to form the rhizosphere soil samples. After the rhizosphere soil was removed, the rice root samples were transferred to new centrifuge tubes (50 mL) containing sterile water and centrifuged at 4°C for 10 min at 8,000 × g; the pellet from this centrifugation was considered the root sample. At two different growth stages, a total of 24 root and 24 rhizosphere soil samples were obtained and stored at –80°C, and molecular analysis was conducted within 6 months of sampling.

DNA Extraction and Quantification of nifH Genes

Genomic DNA was extracted from root and rhizosphere soil samples using the Fast DNA SPIN Kit for Soil (MP Biomedicals, Solon, OH, United States) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. For root samples, the frozen tissues were ground into powder using a mortar and pestle under liquid nitrogen before DNA extraction. The extracted DNA was immediately stored at –20°C after measurement of the DNA concentration.

The abundance of nitrogen fixers was quantified by qPCR targeting of the nifH gene from 24 root and 24 rhizosphere soil samples, respectively. The reactions were performed on a CFX Connect Optical Real-Time Detection System (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, United States) in volumes of 20 μL and containing 1 μL extracted DNA (approximately 50 ng), 10 μL 2 × SYBR Premix Ex Taq (Takara Biotech, Dalian, China), and 500 nM primers PolF (Poly et al., 2001) and AQER (Wartiainen et al., 2008). The parameters were those previously described in the literature (Yu et al., 2018). Briefly, the amplifications were performed with an initial denaturation step at 95°C for 30 s, followed by 36 cycles of denaturation at 95°C for 30 s, annealing at 57°C for 45 s and extension at 72°C for 45 s. The specificity of the amplification products was confirmed by melting curve analysis, and the expected sizes (340 bp) of the amplified fragments were checked in a 1.5% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide.

Standard curves were obtained using 10-fold serial dilutions of the linear Escherichia coli-derived vector plasmid pGEM-T Easy Vector (Promega, Madison, WI) containing a cloned nifH gene derived from Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens USDA 110 (NZ_CP011360). The concentration of the plasmid DNA was measured by a NanoPhotometer P-Class P-330C (IMPLEN, Munich, Germany) and used for the calculation of standard copy numbers. The R2-values and amplification efficiencies were as follows: R2 = 0.996–1.000, efficiency = 94.0–97.0%. Melting curve analysis was used to confirm the specific amplification of target genes and always showed a single peak.

MiSeq Sequencing of nifH Gene Amplicons

The nifH gene was amplified using PCR primers PolF (TGC GAY CCS AAR GCB GAC TC) and AQER (GAC GAT GTA GAT YTC CTG) (Poly et al., 2001; Wartiainen et al., 2008), which was used to detected N2-fixing bacteria including Alphaproteobacteria, Betaproteobaceria, Gamaproteobacteria, and Firmicutes in paddy field (Yu et al., 2018). A unique 12-bp barcode was added to each sample at the 5′-end of the reverse primer. The 20 mL reaction mixtures included 4.0 μL 5 × FastPfu Buffer (plus Mg2+), 2.0 μL 2.5 mM each dNTP, 0.4 μL 5 U/μL TransStart Fastpfu DNA Polymerase (TransGen Biotech, Beijing, China), 0.8 μL 5 μM each primer, 0.2 μL 20 mg mL–1 bovine serum albumin (BSA; Amesco, Tampa, United States) and 10 ng template DNA. The amplification conditions were as follows: initial denaturation at 95°C for 15 min, followed by 36 cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 55°C for 1 min, elongation at 72°C for 1 min, and a final extension step of 72°C for 10 min. The amplification products were approximately 340 bp. Each sample was amplified with three technical replicates, purified with an AxyPrep DNA Gel Extraction Kit (Axygen Biosciences, Union City, CA, United States) and quantified using QuantiFluorTM-ST (Promega, United States) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Purified amplicons were pooled in equimolar amounts and paired-end sequenced (2 × 300) on an Illumina MiSeq platform (Illumina, San Diego, United States) according to the standard protocols by Majorbio Bio-Pharm Technology Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China). In order to determine what kind of N2-fixing bacteria was present in a large number at the heading stage, we focused on the heading stage and examined the diversity and composition of the diazotrophic community at this stage. 12 root samples at the heading stage were used for sequencing. The raw sequences (fastq files) of the 12 rice root samples at the heading stage were deposited in the Sequence Read Archive (SRA) of NCBI under accession numbers SRR10321589–SRR10321600.

Processing of the Sequencing Data

Raw sequences were analyzed by QIIME software (Caporaso et al., 2010). All sequence reads were trimmed and assigned to each sample based on their barcodes, and then quality filtering was performed. Sequences less than 150 bp in length were removed. Chimera removal was carried out using the software program Mothur (Schloss et al., 2009). The nucleotide sequences of nifH were further converted to amino acid sequences using the FunGene Pipeline of the Ribosomal Database Project (Wang et al., 2013). The sequences encoding proteins that did not match the nifH protein sequence or that contained termination codons were discarded. The remaining sequences were aligned against the nifH gene database (Gaby and Buckley, 2014). The remaining high-quality sequences were clustered into operational taxonomic units (OTUs) at 90, 94, and 99% similarity, respectively, with UCLUST (Edgar, 2010; Berthrong et al., 2014), and they were used to estimate alpha diversity indices (e.g., coverage, observed species, Shannon and Simpson indices) by Mothur (Schloss et al., 2009). Taxonomic identity of the OTU clustering at 94% similarity was carried out by mapping representative OTU sequences to reference nifH sequences at the BLAST algorithm-based search site within GenBank. Finally, translated amino acid sequences of each representative of top 30 OTUs were aligned by using the CLUSTAL W program (Thompson et al., 1994), and neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree was constructed by using MEGA version 5 (Tamura et al., 2011). Principal component analysis (PCA) were built using “vegan” package in R (version 3.1.2).

Statistical Analysis

The experiment design was a split-plot factor arranged within a randomized complete block design with three replications (three rectangular paddy fields). The variance analyses were performed using linear mixed-effects model to test the effect of elevated CO2, N fertilization, and their interactions on nifH copy numbers, alpha diversity index (OTU numbers, Shannon and 1/Simpson), and the relative abundance of the main OTUs at the same growth stage. In these models, CO2 was treated as the fixed-effect whole-plot factor, N fertilization as the sub-plot factor, and block as the random effect factor. These analyses were performed in R (version 3.1.2). Multiple comparison was further used to determine which groups were significantly different using Duncan test in SPSS software, version 19.0 (IBM, Armonk, NY, United States). The comparison of nifH copy numbers at the tillering and heading stages were carried out by paired sample t-test procedure in SPSS software. Beta diversity was analyzed using permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) to assess group differences in R (version 3.1.2). The significance level was p ≤ 0.05, while 0.05 < p ≤ 0.1 were considered marginally significant. The data are expressed as the means ± standard deviation.

Results

Effect of Elevated CO2 and N Fertilization on nifH Gene Abundance in the Root Zone at Different Growth Stages of Rice

To estimate the population sizes of N2-fixing bacteria in the root zone at different rice growth stages, we performed qPCR assays of roots and rhizosphere soils sampled from rice grown in the paddy field at the TI stage and at the HI stage. Firstly, we examined the effects of different growth stages on the abundance of N2-fixing bacteria. The copy numbers (× 108 g ⋅ dry weight) of nifH genes in rice roots at the HI stage were significantly higher than those at the TI stage (t = 10.462, p = 0.009; t = 18.862, p = 0.003; t = 15.225, p = 0.004; t = 31.343, p = 0.001) (Supplementary Table 2), with the average increased by ∼4-fold (Figure 2A). Similarly, for rhizosphere soil samples, compared to the TI stage, the copy numbers of nifH genes were greater at the HI stage (t = 8.401, p = 0.014; t = 4.381, p = 0.048; t = 11.329, p = 0.008) (Supplementary Table 2), but only decreased under the combination of aCO2 and eN (t = −7.684, p = 0.017) (Supplementary Table 2 and Figure 2B).

FIGURE 2
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Figure 2. Interactive effects of elevated CO2 and N fertilization on nifH abundance in roots (A) and rhizosphere soils (B) of rice grown in the paddy field at the tillering (TI) and heading (HI) stages. aCO2, ambient CO2; eCO2, elevated atmospheric CO2. aN, no N fertilization; eN, elevated N fertilization. Considering the split-plot design, the statistics were derived using linear mixed-effects model procedure to test the effect of elevated CO2, N fertilization, and their interactions on nifH copy numbers at the same growth stage. Multiple comparison were further used to determine which groups were significantly different with Duncan test. The comparison of nifH copy numbers at the tillering and heading stages from the same plot with paired samples t-test (Data were showed in Supplementary Table 2). ∗∗∗p ≤ 0.001, ∗∗p ≤ 0.01, p ≤ 0.05, ns p > 0.10.

Secondly, we examined the effects of elevated CO2, N fertilization, and their interaction on nifH copy numbers. Significant effects of elevated CO2 [F(1, 2) = 37.4, p = 0.026], N fertilization [F(1, 4) = 7.896, p = 0.048], but no significant interaction [CO2 × N fertilization] [F(1, 4) = 0.877, p = 0.402] on nifH abundance in rice roots at the TI stage were observed (Figure 2A). Meanwhile, significant effects of elevated CO2 [F(1, 2) = 47.52, p = 0.020], N fertilization [F(1, 4) = 18.80, p = 0.012] and interaction [CO2 × N fertilization] [F(1, 4) = 57.95, p = 0.002] on nifH abundance in rice roots at the HI stage were observed (Figure 2A). Further analyses showed that, at the HI stage, N fertilization reduced the abundance of nifH gene copies 2.5-fold (p < 0.001) under aCO2 but increased the abundance of nifH gene copies 1.2-fold (p = 0.031) under eCO2 (Figure 2A). Elevated CO2 doubled the copy numbers of nifH in rice root with N fertilization (p < 0.001), but had no significant effect (p = 0.607) without N addition at the HI stage (Figure 2A). Similarly, for rhizosphere soil samples, a significant interaction [CO2 × N fertilization] on nifH abundance either at the TI stage [F(1, 4) = 15.21, p = 0.018] or the HI stage [F(1, 4) = 188.7, p < 0.001] was observed, but significant effects of elevated CO2 [F(1, 2) = 59.14, p = 0.017], N fertilization [F(1, 4) = 450.9, p < 0.001] on nifH abundance were observed only at the HI stage (Figure 2B). And N fertilization significantly reduced the abundance of the nifH gene under either aCO2 (p < 0.001) or eCO2 (p = 0.001) treatment at the HI stage (Figure 2B). Elevated CO2 also significantly increased the copy numbers of nifH in rice rhizosphere soils with N fertilization (p < 0.001), but had no obvious effect without N addition (p = 0.109) at the HI stage (Figure 2B). As explained above, the combination of elevated CO2 and N fertilization has a significant effect on nifH abundance in rice zone (root and rhizosphere soil) at the HI stage (p < 0.05) (Figures 2A,B).

These results suggested that rice plants have the ability to enrich N2-fixing bacteria according to the growing season. Plants set the conditions for the proliferation of more N2-fixing bacteria at the HI stage than at the TI stage, and the combined effects of eCO2 and eN stimulate the abundance of N2-fixing bacteria in roots at the HI stage.

Overview of N2-fixing Bacterial Community Structures in Rice Roots at the Heading Stage

The statistics from the high-throughput sequencing are summarized in Supplementary Table 3. nifH gene sequencing was performed on 12 rice roots DNA at the HI stage. After averaging each of the three parallel datasets, 47,849 high-quality reads were obtained, with 12,890, 10,998, 12,594, and 11,367 total nifH sequences for the aCO2-aN, aCO2-eN, eCO2-aN, and eCO2-eN plots, respectively. No significant effects of elevated CO2, N fertilization, and interaction [CO2 × N fertilization] on alpha diversity index (OTU numbers, Shannon and 1/Simpson) at the OTU cutoff values of 99, 94, and 90%, respectively, were found (p > 0.05) (data were showed in Supplementary Table 3). At the 99% OTU level, the coverage was 97% for the four plots. The coverage (> 99%) was high for libraries from each plot when OTUs were binned at 94% similarity (Supplementary Table 3). Therefore, we constructed a phylogenetic tree and performed taxonomic classification at 94% OTU similarity in this study.

Principal component analysis (PCA) was performed using all sequence data (Figure 3) to obtain an overview of N2-fixing bacterial community shifts caused by elevated CO2, N fertilization, and their interaction. The results showed a cluster of community structures within the same N fertilization treatment, whereas no distinct separation was observed between two CO2 treatments (PERMANOVA, p = 0.123) (Figure 3).

FIGURE 3
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Figure 3. Principal component analysis (PCA) of nifH sequences at the 94% similarity OTU threshold by permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) test. aCO2, ambient CO2; eCO2, elevated atmospheric CO2. aN, no N fertilization; eN, elevated N fertilization.

Compositions of N2-Fixing Bacterial Communities of Rice Roots at the Heading Stage

The community compositions of root-associated N2-fixing bacteria were analyzed. Together at the order and family level, the rice root-associated N2-fixing bacterial communities were dominated by Proteobacteria (including unclassified Proteobacteria, unclassified Alphaproteobacteria, unclassified Betaproteobacteria, unclassified Gammaproteobacteria) (37.5–40.2%) and Rhizobiales (including unclassified Rhizobiales, Methylocystaceae, Rhizobiaceae, Bradyrhizobiaceae) (45.8–49.7%) (Supplementary Figures 1A,B). Additionally, there were low abundances of unclassified bacteria (9.4–10.3%) and other families (2.9–5.0%) in all plots (Supplementary Figure 1B). N fertilization increased the relative abundance of Methylocystaceae (aCO2, from 16.6 to 26.0%; eCO2, from 13.8 to 24.7%) while reducing the relative abundance of Rhizobiaceae (aCO2, from 10.2 to 1.1%; eCO2, from 9.5 to 4.3%) under both aCO2 and eCO2 treatment (Supplementary Figure 1B). Combined with the community compositions at the genus level, the relative abundances of Methylosinus (type II methanotrophs) and Rhizobium (traditional N2-fixing bacteria) were changed under combined of elevated CO2, N fertilization treatment. The former showed an increasing trend, while the latter showed a decreasing trend (Figure 4).

FIGURE 4
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Figure 4. Relative abundance, at the genus level, of N2-fixing bacterial communities of rice roots at the heading stage under elevated CO2 and nitrogen fertilization treatments. aCO2, ambient CO2; eCO2, elevated atmospheric CO2. aN, no N fertilization; eN, elevated N fertilization.

To further explore the differences between species, we compared the total N2-fixing bacterial community at the OTU level. The top 30 OTUs were clustered into three main groups, which were affiliated with α-proteobacteria, β-proteobacteria, and γ-proteobacteria (Figure 5A). The two OTUs, OTU 369 and OTU 321, were similar to Methylosinus trichosporium (CAD91846) (100% sequence identity) and Rhizobium sp. R2-708 (ALH07184) (100% sequence identity), respectively, which were affiliated with α-proteobacteria, Rhizobiales (Figure 5A). Linear mixed-effects model analyses showed that nitrogen fertilization had a marginally significant effect on the relative abundance of Methylosinus trichosporium (OTU 369) [F(1, 4) = 5.014, p = 0.089], and had a significant effect Rhizobium sp. R2-708 (OTU 321) [F(1, 4) = 8.017, p = 0.047], while no significant effects of elevated CO2 and interaction [CO2 × N fertilization] were observed (Figures 5B,C). In multiple comparison, N fertilization significantly increased Methylosinus trichosporium under eCO2 treatment (the relative abundance from 7.2 to 15.0%) (p = 0.040) (Figure 5B) and decreased Rhizobium sp. R2-708 (from 10.2 to 1.1%) (p = 0.027) under aCO2 treatment (Figure 5C). Under eCO2 treatment, Rhizobium sp. R2-708 decreased with N fertilization (from 9.5 to 4.3%), but the difference was not significant (p = 0.156) (Figure 5C).

FIGURE 5
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Figure 5. Heatmap analysis of the similarities and differences of N2-fixing bacteria of rice roots at the heading stage under elevated CO2 and nitrogen fertilization treatments from the top 30 OTUs (A). The color intensity in each cell shows the relative abundance of a genus/species in a sample. Bold typeface indicates the main OTUs (A). Interactive effects of elevated CO2 and nitrogen fertilization on the relative abundance of the two main OTUs (B,C). aCO2, ambient CO2; eCO2, elevated atmospheric CO2. aN, no N fertilization; eN, elevated N fertilization. Considering the split-plot design, the statistics, the analysis of variance were derived using linear mixed-effects model procedure to test the effect of elevated CO2, N fertilization, and their interactions on the relative abundance of the main OTUs at the same growth stage. Multiple comparison were further used to determine which groups were significantly different with Duncan test. p ≤ 0.05, # 0.05 < p ≤ 0.10, ns p > 0.10.

C1 Compound Cycle-Related Root-Associated N2-Fixing Bacteria at the Heading Stage

Calculating the total relative abundances at the OTU level clearly showed that N2-fixing bacteria of the C1 compound cycle, which include mainly methane-oxidizing bacteria (Methylosinus, Methylocystis, unclassified Methylocystis and Pleomorphomonas) and methanol-oxidizing bacteria (Methyloceanibacter, Rhizobium, and Bradyrhizobium), were predominant in rice roots (42.64–49.03%) (Table 1).

TABLE 1
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Table 1. Relative abundance (%) of methylotrophs at the genus level in the total N2-fixing bacterial communities of rice roots at the heading stage.

Discussion

We demonstrated the combined effects of elevated CO2 and nitrogen fertilization on rice root-associated diazotrophic communities using qPCR and sequencing analysis. nifH gene abundance significantly increased with rice growth. The combined effect of eCO2 and eN stimulated the abundance of nifH genes in rice roots and rhizospheres at the HI stage compared at the TI stage (Figures 2A,B). Moreover, the combined effect of eCO2 and eN promoted the relative abundance of root-associated methane-oxidizing bacteria while inhibiting heterotrophic diazotrophs (Figure 5). To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to analyze the responses of the structure and gene abundance of root-associated diazotrophic communities to elevated CO2 and nitrogen fertilization treatment using the functional gene nifH.

The abundance of nifH genes is positively correlated with the rates of N2 fixation (Hsu and Buckley, 2009; Reed et al., 2011). nifH gene abundance in the roots and rhizospheres at the HI stage was significantly higher than that of the TI stage throughout all samples, and N fertilization decreased its abundance under aCO2 treatment but increased it under eCO2 treatment (Figures 2A,B). Plant growth requires more nitrogen at the HI stage than at the TI stage, and that nitrogen is acquired through the enrichment of root-associated nitrogen-fixing bacteria (Hurek and Reinhold-Hurek, 2003). Generally, nitrogen inputs inhibit N2 fixation because the nitrogenase encoded by the nifH gene is sensitive to nitrogen inputs (Smercina et al., 2019). The negative effect of nitrogen fertilization on N2 fixation has been well reported in legumes and other plants under ambient CO2 conditions (Reed et al., 2011; Fan et al., 2019), and these results are consistent with those of our study. In addition, a previous study carried out on the same FACE platform also showed that eCO2 increased the abundance of the nifH gene in soil with nitrogen inputs and cultivation of the same rice cultivar (Japonica, WuYunJing) (Yu et al., 2018). Plant growth enhances the N demand due to the greater photosynthetic activity and plant biomass accumulation under elevated CO2 (Rogers et al., 2009). For legume plants, eCO2 enhanced N2 fixation by increasing nodule number and biomass at later growth stages but did not reduce N2 fixation (Li et al., 2017). In addition, a 15N labeling experiment showed that eCO2 reduced the inhibitory effect of nitrogen on the N2 fixation activity of soil cultivated with Pisum sativum (Butterly et al., 2016). Taken together, these results suggest that the combination of elevated CO2 and nitrogen fertilization stimulated nifH gene abundance in our study. Other investigations of symbiotic fixation responses to CO2 suggest that N2 fixation increases only in response to eCO2 when nutrients such as P and Mo are added (van Groenigen et al., 2006), and fertilizer often contains P, Mo, and other elements. However, the mechanism of the combined effect of nitrogen fertilization and eCO2 on the abundance of the diazotrophic community is complex and requires future in-depth study. In contrast, elevated CO2 did not affect the nifH gene abundance of roots and rhizospheres under the treatment with no N fertilization at the HI stage in our study (p = 0.607, for roots; p = 0.109, for rhizosphere soils) (Figure 2). This result is consistent with that previously reported by van Groenigen et al. (2006), who showed using meta-analysis that elevated CO2 did not affect N2 fixation by legume plants when N fertilizer was not applied. It is likely that rice plants enrich N2-fixing bacteria at specific growth stages, and nitrogen fertilizer mainly influences N2-fixing bacteria not only in the root zone but also in the bulk soil of paddy rice fields under elevated CO2 treatment such as those projected for the future.

Some changes of the root-associated N2-fixing bacterial community composition at the HI stage under the combined effect of elevated CO2 and N fertilization treatment were observed. Methylosinus (Methylocystaceae), Methylocystis (Methylocystaceae), Rhizobium (Rhizobiaceae), Methyloceanibacter (Rhizobiales), Pleomorphomonas (Methylocystaceae), Bradyrhizobium (Bradyrhizobiaceae) and other unclassified Rhizobiales within the order Rhizobiales were commonly detected as the main diazotrophs from all root samples. But eCO2 increased the relative abundance of Methylosinus trichosporium (OTU369) under N fertilization treatment (Figure 5B). One Japanese FACE experiment showed that elevated CO2 tended to decrease the relative abundance of Methylocystis and Methylosinus in rice roots at the ripening stage, which was observed through 16S rRNA gene sequencing; however, statistical analysis was lacking in that experiment (Okubo et al., 2014). The genera Methylosinus and Methylocystis of the family Methylocystacea are methane-oxidizing bacteria that are frequently detected in rice roots and forest soils as diazotrophs (Buckley et al., 2008; Bao et al., 2014a; Shinoda et al., 2019) and in particular as the dominant group in later rice growth stages (Shrestha et al., 2010). Moreover, type II methanotrophs, including Methylosinus, can assimilate up to 50% of their biomass from CO2 (Trotsenko and Murrell, 2008). These findings can explain the results observed in our study, i.e., the increased relative abundance of Methylosinus trichosporium (OTU369) under the combination of eCO2 and N fertilization. Thus, the increased nifH gene abundance of roots under the combination of eCO2 and eN might explain the increasing nifH copy numbers of methanotrophs (Figure 2A). Apart from Methylosinus trichosporium, N fertilization decreased the relative abundance of Rhizobium sp. R2-708 (OTU321) under aCO2 treatment (Figure 5C). Rhizobium is a well-known N2-fixing bacterium that is frequently detected in legumes as well as in rice roots (Zahran, 1999; Bao et al., 2014a; Yoneyama et al., 2019) and other plants. Heterotrophic N2-fixing bacteria, including Rhizobium, are often inhibited by nitrogen inputs (Kumar et al., 2018). This result showed that compared to Rhizobium, root-associated diazotrophic Methylosinus was more stable under climate change conditions or nitrogen fertilization, even when combined. In addition, nifH-containing microbes are complex and high diversity, which may have a relationship with gene horizontal transfer of nifH (Remigi et al., 2016). Horizontal transfer of nifH gene is more complicated. Horizontal transfer of nifH gene was related to the consistency between the phylogenies of nifH gene (or phylogenetic tree of nifH, nifD, and nifK) and 16S rRNA gene (Bolhuis et al., 2010). There was no overall horizontal gene transfer of nifH gene across phylogeny in our study (Figure 5A). The main nifH sequences of OTUs were closely related to Methylocystis and Methylosinus of Methylocystaceae (type II methanotrophs), Rhizobium (Rhizobiaceae) and Bradyrhizobiacea, and they closed to each other within Rhizobiales of Alphaproteobacteria (Figure 5A). Therefore, the result is consistent with phylogenetic analysis with 16S rRNA gene (Auman et al., 2001; Dedysh et al., 2004). But both sequences of OTU572 and OTU532 were closely related to Hyphomicrobium sp. NDB2 (nifH sequence identity, 100%) and Pleomorphomonas koreensis (99.1%), respectively, and were clustered into Betaproteobacteria (Figure 5A). This result is inconsistent with a previous study showed that both Hyphomicrobium and Pleomorphomonas belong to the Rhizobiales of Alphaproteobacteria with the 16S rRNA (Hordt et al., 2020). Thus, the nifH of above two OTUs may be acquired through horizontal gene transfer across phylogeny.

Interestingly, most diazotrophs were related to the C1 compound cycle, which includes methane-oxidizing bacteria and methanol-utilizing bacteria, in all root samples in our study (Table 1). In rice paddies, methane-oxidizing bacteria are the most dominant microbes among C1 bacteria, because continuous methane production in anaerobic sediment layers or in roots provides a carbon and energy source for root-associated diazotrophic methanotrophs (Bao et al., 2014a). eCO2 can significantly increase methane emissions (Tokida et al., 2011). Usually, methanotrophs are able to fix N2 under N-limited conditions (Bodelier and Laanbroek, 2004; Shinoda et al., 2019). However, Zheng et al. (2019) found that N2 fixation was stimulated by the substrate C/N ratio rather than by the N concentration alone. N2 fixation is enhanced when substrate C is relatively plentiful and substrate N is relatively scarce (Reed et al., 2011). Thus, the availability of substrate C is critically important for N2 fixation. eCO2 can increase the photosynthetic C fixation capacity and biomass accumulation of rice plants (Rogers et al., 2009), which must take up large amounts of N (Shimono et al., 2009). Elevated N fertilization can help maintain a higher photosynthetic rate and ensure a higher yield under eCO2 (Kimball et al., 2002). Therefore, more root-associated diazotrophic methanotrophs may be needed to provide sufficient N2 fixation to meet the demand for a higher C/N ratio required for rice biomass accumulation under both eN and eCO2 treatments. This may be one explanation for the N2 fixation performed by root-associated diazotrophic methanotrophs at high N levels. The N2-fixing activity of diazotrophic methanotrophs under N-rich conditions needs to be studied in more detail in the future. Moreover, methanotrophic N2-fixing bacteria (Methylosinus and Methylocystis) in the roots, and other N2-fixing bacteria, such as Bradyrhizobium, Rhizobium, and Methyloceanibacter, which are frequently detected as methanol-oxidizing bacteria using metaproteomics or functional gene mxaF/xoxF sequencing analysis (Bao et al., 2014a; Macey et al., 2020), may utilize the methanol produced via the methane oxidation process to perform N2 fixation. However, this relationship changes with nitrogen supplementation because the N2-fixing capacity of Bradyrhizobium and Rhizobium is inhibited by nitrogen (Kumar et al., 2018), while that of diazotrophic methanotrophs is more stable. In addition, eCO2 significantly increases the total organic carbon content of rice root exudates (Bhattacharyya et al., 2013), which may influence the diversity and activity of rhizospheric and root-associated C1 bacteria. Macey et al. (2020) reported that methanol-utilizing methylotrophs were widely distributed in land plant-associated soil because they use the methanol produced as a metabolic byproduct during plant growth. Thus, C1-cycling bacteria in the root zones of both terrestrial plants and aquatic plants are important for the balance of carbon and nitrogen cycling and can increase benefits for plant growth.

Conclusion

The abundance of the nifH gene in rice roots greatly increased at reproductive stages compared to vegetative growth stages. Elevated CO2 and N fertilization significantly affect the abundance of the nifH gene in rice roots at two growth stages, but the interaction [CO2 × N fertilization] only significantly affects nifH gene abundance of roots at the heading stage. Most root-associated diazotrophs (which accounted for approximately 50% of the relative abundance) were related to methanotrophs and methylotrophs at the HI stage. Of these, elevated CO2 and N fertilization significantly affected the relative abundances of root-associated Methylosinus and Rhizobium. The results of this study will contribute to expanding our understanding of microorganism-related C/N dynamics in rice fields under future climate change conditions.

Data Availability Statement

The datasets presented in this study can be found in online repositories. The names of the repository/repositories and accession number(s) can be found in the article/Supplementary Material.

Author Contributions

ZB and CZ designed the study. JH, WC, and SZ performed the experiments. JL, MZ, YL, ZJ, RY, JZ, and ZB analyzed the data. JL and ZB wrote the manuscript. All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version.

Funding

This work was supported by the grants from the Science and Technology Major Project on Lakes of Inner Mongolia (No. ZDZX2018054), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 41563009 and 41963008), the Natural Science Foundation of Inner Mongolia, China (No. 2019MS04005), and the Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing, China (No. cstc2020jcyj-msxmX1011).

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Supplementary Material

The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2021.628108/full#supplementary-material

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Keywords: elevated atmospheric CO2, nitrogen fertilization, rice paddy, plant-associated nitrogen-fixing bacteria, growth stages

Citation: Liu J, Han J, Zhu C, Cao W, Luo Y, Zhang M, Zhang S, Jia Z, Yu R, Zhao J and Bao Z (2021) Elevated Atmospheric CO2 and Nitrogen Fertilization Affect the Abundance and Community Structure of Rice Root-Associated Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria. Front. Microbiol. 12:628108. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.628108

Received: 11 November 2020; Accepted: 29 March 2021;
Published: 21 April 2021.

Edited by:

Marta Goberna, Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agroalimentaria (INIA), Spain

Reviewed by:

Tapan Kumar Adhya, KIIT University, India
Lidong Shen, Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology, China
Kiwamu Minamisawa, Tohoku University, Japan

Copyright © 2021 Liu, Han, Zhu, Cao, Luo, Zhang, Zhang, Jia, Yu, Zhao and Bao. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Zhihua Bao, zhihua_bao@imu.edu.cn

These authors have contributed equally to this work and share first authorship

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