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Physiological and Multi-Omics Insights into Trichoderma harzianum Alleviating Aged Microplastic Stress in Nicotiana benthamiana
Summary
Researchers found that the biocontrol fungus Trichoderma harzianum T4 alleviates stress caused by aged PBAT biodegradable microplastics in Nicotiana benthamiana plants, as demonstrated through physiological and multi-omics analyses. The fungus modulated plant metabolic and transcriptomic responses, suggesting a promising biological approach to mitigating biodegradable microplastic impacts in agricultural systems.
Microplastics derived from biodegradable PBAT film, widely used in agriculture, pose ecological and biological hazards. This study explores how Trichoderma harzianum T4 mitigates this microplastic-induced stress in Nicotiana benthamiana. Using five experimental setup-control (CK), low/high-dose aged microplastics (MP80/MP320), and their co-treatments with T. harzianum T4 (MP80+T4/MP320+T4), multi-omics analyses reveal the microplastic stress-alleviating mechanisms of T. harzianum T4. Aged microplastics significantly inhibit plant growth, promote reactive oxygen species (ROS) and malondialdehyde (MDA) accumulation, and disrupt metabolic homeostasis. Conversely, T. harzianum T4 activates the plant antioxidant defense system, reducing ROS/MDA levels and upregulating superoxide dismutase (SOD)/peroxidase (POD) activities, and promotes biomass. Transcriptomic analysis shows T. harzianum T4 reverses gene expression patterns disrupted by microplastics, particularly in DNA replication and pentose-glucuronic acid pathways. Metagenomic sequencing indicates T. harzianum T4 restores soil microbial diversity, increases the abundance of Bacteroidota and Myxococcota, downregulates antibiotic resistance genes (e.g., tetA5, MDR), and upregulates carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZys), thereby enhancing carbon metabolism. In conclusion, T. harzianum T4 alleviates microplastic stress through a tripartite mechanism: activating plant stress-response gene networks, reshaping soil microbial communities, and modulating functional gene expression, offering a promising bioremediation strategy.
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