Heat Stress and Soil Microbial Disturbance Influence Soybean Root Metabolite, Microbiome Profiles, and Nodulation
Authors: Elango, D., Van der Laan, L., Gholizadeh, S., Premarathne, M. D. G. P., Dutter, C. R., DePew, C., McDaniel, M., Singh, A. K.
Category: Plant Biology
Model Organism: Glycine max
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The study investigated how native soil microbes affect heat tolerance in soybean (Glycine max) by comparing plants grown in natural versus microbiome‑disturbed soils under optimal and elevated temperatures. Using 16S rRNA and ITS sequencing alongside non‑targeted root metabolomics, the authors found significant shifts in bacterial and fungal communities, suppressed nodule‑forming bacteria, and altered root metabolites that correlated with reduced nodulation efficiency under heat stress. Integrated multi‑omics analyses linked microbial composition to metabolite profiles and nitrogen‑fixation traits, highlighting a coordinated response of the root physiological system to combined heat and microbiome perturbations.