Microbiota-mediated disease resistance in plants.
TL;DR: Here, the state of this cross-disciplinary field is synthesized to bridge the gap toward rational design of synthetic microbial communities (SynComs) with broad, durable, and flexible plant protective activities.
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Abstract: Plant pathogens represent a constant and major threat to global food production, with 20%– 30% global crop losses estimated, principally in food-deficit areas [1]. Pesticide use, breeding of resistance genes, and genetic manipulation of plant immune components have helped to mitigate this threat. However, rapid evolution of pathogen resistance and virulence, together with host range expansion and host jumps, contribute to severe disease outbreaks, especially in the context of current agricultural practices [2]. This underscores the need to reduce the lag time between the appearance of new diseases and development of protective measures effective on a broad range of pathogens and host plants. In this context, microbial products and inoculants for plant protection have recently gained attention thanks to the large efforts made to systematically isolate, identify, and characterize plant-associated microbes that engage in intimate association with healthy plants [3]. Recent findings indicate that individualand community-level features provided by plant microbiota members can confer extended immune functions to the plant host. Importantly, the traits lent by “beneficial” microbes strongly depend on the interplay between the soil nutrient status and the plant immune system [4, 5]. Thus, the successful implementation of microbiota-mediated disease protection will depend on our mechanistic understanding of how microorganisms interact with their hosts and with one another in natural environments. Here, we seek to synthesize the state of this cross-disciplinary field to bridge the gap toward rational design of synthetic microbial communities (SynComs) [6] with broad, durable, and flexible plant protective activities.
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Citations
Pathogen-induced activation of disease-suppressive functions in the endophytic root microbiome
Víctor J. Carrión,Juan E. Pérez-Jaramillo,Viviane Cordovez,Vittorio Tracanna,Mattias de Hollander,Daniel Ruiz-Buck,Lucas William Mendes,Wilfred F. J. van IJcken,Ruth Gomez-Exposito,Somayah S. Elsayed,Prarthana Mohanraju,Adini Q Arifah,John van der Oost,Joseph N. Paulson,Rodrigo Mendes,Gilles P. van Wezel,Marnix H. Medema,Jos M. Raaijmakers +17 more
TL;DR: The results highlight that endophytic root microbiomes harbor a wealth of as yet unknown functional traits that, in concert, can protect the plant inside out.
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TL;DR: Understanding how plants manipulate their microbiome can aid in the design of next-generation microbial inoculants for targeted disease suppression and enhanced plant growth.
The plant endosphere world – bacterial life within plants
TL;DR: In this review, recent findings on endosphere environments, their physiological conditions and endophyte colonization are presented and an outlook on needs of future research is provided to improve understanding on the role of microbiota colonizing the endosphere on plant traits and ecosystem functioning.
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Ke Yu,Yang Liu,Ramon Tichelaar,Niharika Savant,Ellen Lagendijk,Sanne J.L. van Kuijk,Ioannis A. Stringlis,Anja J.H. Van Dijken,Corné M. J. Pieterse,Peter A. H. M. Bakker,Cara H. Haney,Roeland L. Berendsen +11 more
TL;DR: Findings show that suppression of immune responses is an important function of the root microbiome, as it facilitates colonization by beneficial root microbiota.
208
An extended root phenotype : the rhizosphere, its formation and impacts on plant fitness
Carla de la Fuente Cantó,Marie Simonin,Marie Simonin,Marie Simonin,Eoghan King,Lionel Moulin,Malcolm J. Bennett,Gabriel Castrillo,Laurent Laplaze +8 more
TL;DR: Current understanding of how plants shape the rhizosphere is reviewed and how applying their solutions in crops will enable us to harvest the benefits of the extended root phenotype is discussed.
208
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Root Endophyte Colletotrichum tofieldiae Confers Plant Fitness Benefits that Are Phosphate Status Dependent
Kei Hiruma,Kei Hiruma,Nina Gerlach,Soledad Sacristán,Ryohei Thomas Nakano,Ryohei Thomas Nakano,Stéphane Hacquard,Barbara Kracher,Ulla Neumann,Diana Ramírez,Marcel Bucher,Richard J. O'Connell,Richard J. O'Connell,Paul Schulze-Lefert,Paul Schulze-Lefert +14 more
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Establishing Causality: Opportunities of Synthetic Communities for Plant Microbiome Research
TL;DR: Reductionist approaches to disentangle the inherent complexity of interactions in situ will provide new insights into the fundamental biology of plant-microbe interactions and help to harness the power of the microbiome.
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Root exudates drive the soil-borne legacy of aboveground pathogen infection
Jun Yuan,Jun Zhao,Tao Wen,Mengli Zhao,Rong Li,Pim Goossens,Qiwei Huang,Yang Bai,Jorge M. Vivanco,George A. Kowalchuk,Roeland L. Berendsen,Qirong Shen +11 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that plants can recruit beneficial rhizosphere communities via modification of plant exudation patterns in response to exposure to aboveground pathogens to the benefit of subsequent plant generations.
Trophic network architecture of root-associated bacterial communities determines pathogen invasion and plant health
Zhong Wei,Tianjie Yang,Ville-Petri Friman,Yangchun Xu,Qirong Shen,Alexandre Jousset,Alexandre Jousset +6 more
TL;DR: It is found that bipartite resource competition networks are better predictors of invasion resistance compared with resident community diversity and bacterial resource competition network characteristics can thus be important in explaining positive diversity–invasion resistance relationships in bacterial rhizosphere communities.
Microbial and biochemical basis of a Fusarium wilt-suppressive soil
Jae Yul Cha,Sangjo Han,Hee-Jeon Hong,Hyunji Cho,Da-Ran Kim,Youngho Kwon,Soon Kyeong Kwon,Max Crüsemann,Yong Bok Lee,Jihyun F. Kim,Guri Giaever,Corey Nislow,Bradley S. Moore,Linda S. Thomashow,David M. Weller,Youn-Sig Kwak +15 more
TL;DR: The microbial characterization of a Korean soil with specific suppressiveness to Fusarium wilt of strawberry is reported, highlighting the role of natural antibiotics as weapons in the microbial warfare in the rhizosphere that is integral to plant health, vigor and development.