Biohacking agarwood: the impact of fire drills and brine on endophytes and metabolites of Aquilaria sinensis

Abstract Agarwood is a valuable resinous aromatic substance known to have healing properties. Only plants in the Thymelaeace family, specifically the genera Aquilaria and Gyrinops, produce it to defend themselves from insect, bacterial, and fungal attacks. Over-harvesting of natural agarwood has giv...

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Main Authors: Ningnan Zhang, Xiuren Zhou, Shengkun Wang, Daping Xu, Zhou Hong, Dahao Zhou, Deyou Tang, Zhengjian Wang, Jie Song, Jie Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-04-01
Series:BMC Plant Biology
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-025-06574-y
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author Ningnan Zhang
Xiuren Zhou
Shengkun Wang
Daping Xu
Zhou Hong
Dahao Zhou
Deyou Tang
Zhengjian Wang
Jie Song
Jie Chen
author_facet Ningnan Zhang
Xiuren Zhou
Shengkun Wang
Daping Xu
Zhou Hong
Dahao Zhou
Deyou Tang
Zhengjian Wang
Jie Song
Jie Chen
author_sort Ningnan Zhang
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Agarwood is a valuable resinous aromatic substance known to have healing properties. Only plants in the Thymelaeace family, specifically the genera Aquilaria and Gyrinops, produce it to defend themselves from insect, bacterial, and fungal attacks. Over-harvesting of natural agarwood has given rise to different artificial agarwood induction techniques. However, the contribution of endophytic microorganisms in this process remains largely unknown. Herein, we employed fire drills and fire drill + brine treatments and investigated their impact on metabolite constituents and endophytes over time. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was used to examine the metabolites, and 16 S and ITS amplicon sequencing were applied to check for endophytes. Metabolites from each treatment were related to 16 S and ITS amplicon sequencing results from different times to find out what effect the treatments had and what role endophytes played in making agarwood. Fire drills with 50–80 ml of 0.4 mmol brine treatment resulted in the highest production of essential oil from agarwood, whereas fire drills with 50–80 ml of 4.0 mmol brine treatment produced the highest number of metabolites. Agarwood fragrant compounds such as chromones, sesquiterpenes, and agarotetrol were prominent among the differentially expressed metabolites and were positively associated with the abundance of bacterial endophytes Acidobacteriota, Chlamydiae, Bacteroidota, and Actinobacteria; and the fungal endophytes Rozellomycota, Basidiomycota, Aphelidiomycota, and Mortierellomycota. Saprotrophs and pathogens were prevalent in the treatment groups; however, with time, their proportion declined as Symbiotroph’s proportion inclined, indicating successive roles of these fungi in agarwood induction and propagation. Among them, Acidobacteriota, Chlamydiae, Bacteroidota, and Actinobacteria bacterial; and Rozellomycota, Basidiomycota, Aphelidiomycota, and Mortierellomycota fungal endophytes are correlated with enhanced levels of essential agarwood fragrances such as Chromones, Sesquiterpenes, and Agarospirol. Our results show how important bacterial and fungal endophytes are for making agarwood. They also show how these endophytes change when interacting with the host plant after a fire drill and a brine treatment. A moderate brine concentration (0.4 mmol) following a fire drill can thus be employed as a sustainable agarwood production practice.
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spelling doaj-art-62c17f4cb1ba4e9bb3157f5120e171542025-08-20T02:55:38ZengBMCBMC Plant Biology1471-22292025-04-0125112210.1186/s12870-025-06574-yBiohacking agarwood: the impact of fire drills and brine on endophytes and metabolites of Aquilaria sinensisNingnan Zhang0Xiuren Zhou1Shengkun Wang2Daping Xu3Zhou Hong4Dahao Zhou5Deyou Tang6Zhengjian Wang7Jie Song8Jie Chen9Research Institute of Tropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of ForestrySchool of Life Science and Technology, Henan Institute of Science and TechnologyResearch Institute of Tropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of ForestryResearch Institute of Tropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of ForestryResearch Institute of Tropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of ForestryHuazhou Yuanlai Agarwood Limited CompanySchool of Software Engineering, South China University of TechnologyHuazhou Forestry BureauSchool of Tourism and Culture, Guangdong ECO-Engineering PolytechnicResearch Institute of Tropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of ForestryAbstract Agarwood is a valuable resinous aromatic substance known to have healing properties. Only plants in the Thymelaeace family, specifically the genera Aquilaria and Gyrinops, produce it to defend themselves from insect, bacterial, and fungal attacks. Over-harvesting of natural agarwood has given rise to different artificial agarwood induction techniques. However, the contribution of endophytic microorganisms in this process remains largely unknown. Herein, we employed fire drills and fire drill + brine treatments and investigated their impact on metabolite constituents and endophytes over time. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was used to examine the metabolites, and 16 S and ITS amplicon sequencing were applied to check for endophytes. Metabolites from each treatment were related to 16 S and ITS amplicon sequencing results from different times to find out what effect the treatments had and what role endophytes played in making agarwood. Fire drills with 50–80 ml of 0.4 mmol brine treatment resulted in the highest production of essential oil from agarwood, whereas fire drills with 50–80 ml of 4.0 mmol brine treatment produced the highest number of metabolites. Agarwood fragrant compounds such as chromones, sesquiterpenes, and agarotetrol were prominent among the differentially expressed metabolites and were positively associated with the abundance of bacterial endophytes Acidobacteriota, Chlamydiae, Bacteroidota, and Actinobacteria; and the fungal endophytes Rozellomycota, Basidiomycota, Aphelidiomycota, and Mortierellomycota. Saprotrophs and pathogens were prevalent in the treatment groups; however, with time, their proportion declined as Symbiotroph’s proportion inclined, indicating successive roles of these fungi in agarwood induction and propagation. Among them, Acidobacteriota, Chlamydiae, Bacteroidota, and Actinobacteria bacterial; and Rozellomycota, Basidiomycota, Aphelidiomycota, and Mortierellomycota fungal endophytes are correlated with enhanced levels of essential agarwood fragrances such as Chromones, Sesquiterpenes, and Agarospirol. Our results show how important bacterial and fungal endophytes are for making agarwood. They also show how these endophytes change when interacting with the host plant after a fire drill and a brine treatment. A moderate brine concentration (0.4 mmol) following a fire drill can thus be employed as a sustainable agarwood production practice.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-025-06574-yAgarotetrolAmpliconGC-MSSaprotrophsSymbiotrophs
spellingShingle Ningnan Zhang
Xiuren Zhou
Shengkun Wang
Daping Xu
Zhou Hong
Dahao Zhou
Deyou Tang
Zhengjian Wang
Jie Song
Jie Chen
Biohacking agarwood: the impact of fire drills and brine on endophytes and metabolites of Aquilaria sinensis
BMC Plant Biology
Agarotetrol
Amplicon
GC-MS
Saprotrophs
Symbiotrophs
title Biohacking agarwood: the impact of fire drills and brine on endophytes and metabolites of Aquilaria sinensis
title_full Biohacking agarwood: the impact of fire drills and brine on endophytes and metabolites of Aquilaria sinensis
title_fullStr Biohacking agarwood: the impact of fire drills and brine on endophytes and metabolites of Aquilaria sinensis
title_full_unstemmed Biohacking agarwood: the impact of fire drills and brine on endophytes and metabolites of Aquilaria sinensis
title_short Biohacking agarwood: the impact of fire drills and brine on endophytes and metabolites of Aquilaria sinensis
title_sort biohacking agarwood the impact of fire drills and brine on endophytes and metabolites of aquilaria sinensis
topic Agarotetrol
Amplicon
GC-MS
Saprotrophs
Symbiotrophs
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-025-06574-y
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