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Fusarium wilt disease induced changes in the composition and function of the rhizosphere metabolome and microbiome in tobacco plants
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  • Published: 24 February 2026

Fusarium wilt disease induced changes in the composition and function of the rhizosphere metabolome and microbiome in tobacco plants

  • Lin Yang1 na1,
  • Wenjuan Yang3 na1,
  • Honghao Zhang1,
  • Lingfeng Li1,
  • Jiaxin Liu1,
  • Mei Li1,
  • Rubing Xu2,
  • Haibo Xiang1,
  • Yanyan Li2 &
  • …
  • Yong Yang1 

Scientific Reports , Article number:  (2026) Cite this article

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Subjects

  • Ecology
  • Microbiology
  • Plant sciences

Abstract

Tobacco Fusarium wilt (TFW), caused by Fusarium spp., is a destructive disease affecting tobacco crops and resulting in significant economic losses. The current chemical fungicide-based management strategy poses a risk of resistance development in pathogens. In order to identify key factors in the tobacco rhizosphere for sustainable TFW control, untargeted metabolomics and microbiomics were conducted to analyze the key metabolites and microbes between healthy and diseased rhizosphere soils. The results revealed a total of 65 differential metabolites (DMs), with 40 upregulated and 25 downregulated were identified in the diseased group. Among these, Aesculin, 8-Deoxy-11-hydroxy-13-chlorogrosheimin, and N-Gluconyl ethanolamine phosphate were identified as key DMs exhibiting a strong negative correlation with healthy soil status. The microbiome analysis revealed that bacterial diversity (OTUs: 3278 vs. 3039; Shannon: 6.72 vs. 6.65) and fungal diversity (OTUs: 919 vs. 701; Shannon: 3.91 vs. 3.44) were significantly higher in healthy soils. Furthermore, co-occurrence networks in healthy soils were larger and more stable, with bacteria comprising 431 nodes compared to 405 in diseased soils, and fungi comprising 112 nodes compared to 101 in diseased soils. Additionally, the analysis of the microbial community assembly process revealed that deterministic processes dominated microbial assembly in healthy soils during the first 75 d, subsequently shifting toward stochastic processes. In contrast, diseased soils exhibited a consistently deterministic assembly. Furthermore, we observed that variations in soil types influenced the distribution of key microbial groups. Chloroflexi, Bryobacter, Bacillus, Preussia, and Tausonia, were enriched in healthy soils while Lysobacter, Arthrobacter, Fusarium, and Lectera were dominated in diseased soils. The combined analysis results indicated that the three key DMs correlated positively with disease-enriched microbes but negatively with health-associated taxa. This study provides insights into the changes in and microbe-metabolite interactions within the tobacco rhizosphere under pathogen stress and supports the future development of TFW control strategies based on key metabolites and microbes.

Data availability

The data generated for this study are available in the article.

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Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the China National Tobacco Corporation Key Technology Projects (Grant Nos. 110202401013 (LS-03), 110202101047 (LS-07), 110202201019 (LS-03)), and Hubei Provincial Tobacco Corporation Key Technology Project (Grant No. 027Y2022-023).

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  1. These authors contributed equally: Lin Yang and Wenjuan Yang.

Authors and Affiliations

  1. State Key Laboratory of Biocatalysis and Enzyme Engineering, College of Life Sciences, Hubei University, Wuhan, 430062, China

    Lin Yang, Honghao Zhang, Lingfeng Li, Jiaxin Liu, Mei Li, Haibo Xiang & Yong Yang

  2. Tobacco Research Institute of Hubei Province, Wuhan, 430030, China

    Rubing Xu & Yanyan Li

  3. Hubei Provincial Key Laboratory of Occurrence and Intervention of Kidney Diseases, Hubei Provincial Engineering Research Center of Immunotherapy Drugs for Renal Tumors, School of Medicine, Hubei Polytechnic University, Huangshi, 435003, China

    Wenjuan Yang

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Contributions

Conceptualization, H.B.X.; Y.Y.L.; Y.Y.; methodology, L.Y., H.H.Z., L.F.L., and J.X.L.; software, M.L.; data evaluation, W.J.Y. and R.B.X.; writing—original draft preparation, L.Y. and H.H.Z. Revision, W.J.Y.; proofreading, H.B.X. L.Y. and W.J.Y. contribute equally to this work. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

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Correspondence to Haibo Xiang, Yanyan Li or Yong Yang.

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Yang, L., Yang, W., Zhang, H. et al. Fusarium wilt disease induced changes in the composition and function of the rhizosphere metabolome and microbiome in tobacco plants. Sci Rep (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-40653-w

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  • Received: 18 February 2025

  • Accepted: 14 February 2026

  • Published: 24 February 2026

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-40653-w

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Keywords

  • Fusarium wilt
  • Diseased-healthy
  • Soil type
  • Metabolome
  • Microbiome
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