| Literature DB >> 25431199 |
Kerrie Farrar1, David Bryant, Naomi Cope-Selby.
Abstract
Plant production systems globally must be optimized to produce stable high yields from limited land under changing and variable climates. Demands for food, animal feed, and feedstocks for bioenergy and biorefining applications, are increasing with population growth, urbanization and affluence. Low-input, sustainable, alternatives to petrochemical-derived fertilizers and pesticides are required to reduce input costs and maintain or increase yields, with potential biological solutions having an important role to play. In contrast to crops that have been bred for food, many bioenergy crops are largely undomesticated, and so there is an opportunity to harness beneficial plant-microbe relationships which may have been inadvertently lost through intensive crop breeding. Plant-microbe interactions span a wide range of relationships in which one or both of the organisms may have a beneficial, neutral or negative effect on the other partner. A relatively small number of beneficial plant-microbe interactions are well understood and already exploited; however, others remain understudied and represent an untapped reservoir for optimizing plant production. There may be near-term applications for bacterial strains as microbial biopesticides and biofertilizers to increase biomass yield from energy crops grown on land unsuitable for food production. Longer term aims involve the design of synthetic genetic circuits within and between the host and microbes to optimize plant production. A highly exciting prospect is that endosymbionts comprise a unique resource of reduced complexity microbial genomes with adaptive traits of great interest for a wide variety of applications.Entities:
Keywords: LEANOME; bacterial endophyte; biofertilization; plant-microbe signalling; sustainable agriculture; symbiosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25431199 PMCID: PMC4265282 DOI: 10.1111/pbi.12279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Biotechnol J ISSN: 1467-7644 Impact factor: 9.803
Figure 1Plant–Microbe associations. Free-living bacteria in the soil (a), the rhizosphere population (b) and endosymbionts within the root (c) of a plant host may be a true continuum, with a subset of soil bacteria attracted to the rhizosphere (circles). A smaller number are able to enter the host and exist as endophytes (blue circles). The nature of the interaction with the plant requires specialization on the part of the microbe. Generalist microbes (squares and circles) tend to have larger genomes, enabling them to occupy different environmental niches and plant hosts, or to exist as facultative endosymbionts or opportunistic pathogens, depending on environmental circumstances. Niche adaptation requires genomic specialization, often via genome reduction (red triangles). The resulting LEANOMEs limit the fitness of a given organism to fulfil multiple roles, or even occupy different hosts, but offer potential tools for synthetic biology approaches to optimize plant–microbe interactions.
Reported bacterial endophytes isolated from bioenergy crops
| Bioenergy crop | Endophytic bacteria | References |
|---|---|---|
| Sorghum | ||
| Pennisetum | ||
| Sugarcane | ||
| Raton | ||
| Paungfoo- | ||
| Miscanthus | ||
| Poplar | ||
| Willow | ||
Indicates a published genome sequence is available, and the corresponding reference.
Summary of beneficial plant–microbe interactions and near-term applications
| Activity | Application | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Phytohormone production | Plant growth promotion | Develop synthetic consortia for use as yield boosting agents |
| Biological nitrogen fixation/phosphate soulbilization | Biofertilizer | Identify novel strains and elucidate host–microbe specificity mechanisms |
| Plant protection | Biocontrol | Screening of endophyte collections for antimicrobial properties and plant defence induction |
| Abiotic stress tolerance | Boost plant biomass on marginal land | Bioprospecting for endophytes of plants growing under extreme conditions, for example drought, cold and salinity |
| Phytoremediation | Remediation of contaminated land | Bioprospecting for endophytes of plants growing on a range of contaminated sites |
| Endophytic specialization | Novel pathways and reduced genomes for synthetic applications | Genome analysis of endophytic and closely related species and development of molecular parts and devices libraries |
Figure 2The possible six motifs of microbial interactions between two bacterial strains (developed from Großkopf and Soyer, 2014).
Figure 3Bacterial genome size associated with the stage of intracellular host adaptation. Early = facultative intracellular; advanced = obligate intracellular; extreme = obligate intracellular mutualistic (cooperative). (adapted from Toft and Andersson, 2010).