Microbiome compositional structure differed significantly across sieving fractions, host genotypes, and compartments (wart vs. tare soil). Wart microbiomes were enriched in Pseudomonas trivialis and Bacillus atrophaeus, taxa potentially involved in pathogen-specific suppression. Tare soils harbored transitional microbiomes shaped by host proximity, enriched with Bacillus species that may offer both generalist and targeted BCA activity. Descheduled soils under long-term nonhost crop rotations harbored broad-spectrum BCAs contributing to environmental sensing and nutrient requisition. Functional prediction suggested enrichment of xenobiotic degradation and chitin metabolism pathways in diseased soils, primarily associated with Bacillus, Pseudomonas, and Paenibacillus. Network analysis indicated fragile yet densely connected communities in diseased soils versus modular and stable structures in descheduled systems. Altogether, this study represents a first critical step toward developing biocontrol strategies for S. endobioticum by revealing a gradient of biocontrol reservoirs associated with disease pressure and management history. The use of functional prediction and correlation network tools provides essential starting points for hypothesis-driven research into disease suppression and biocontrol in a system with no prior microbiome data, and these findings warrant targeted isolation and in vitro/in planta validation for BCA development.
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Ishraq Akbar
Yichao Shi
Bart van de Vossenberg
Socio-Environmental Systems Modeling
Frontiers in Plant Science
University of Ottawa
Wageningen University & Research
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
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Akbar et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a76050c6e9836116a2ced3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2025.1707759