| Literature DB >> 29410675 |
Raheem Shahzad1, Abdul L Khan2, Saqib Bilal1, Sajjad Asaf2, In-Jung Lee1.
Abstract
Phytobeneficial microbes, particularly endophytes, such as fungi and bacteria, are concomitant partners of plants throughout its developmental stages, including seed germination, root and stem growth, and fruiting. Endophytic microbes have been identified in plants that grow in a wide array of habitats; however, seed-borne endophytic microbes have not been fully explored yet. Seed-borne endophytes are of great interest because of their vertical transmission; their potential to produce various phytohormones, enzymes, antimicrobial compounds, and other secondary metabolites; and improve plant biomass and yield under biotic and abiotic stresses. This review addresses the current knowledge on endophytes, their ability to produce metabolites, and their influence on plant growth and stress mitigation.Entities:
Keywords: metabolite production; plant growth; seed endophytes; stress mitigation; vertical transmission
Year: 2018 PMID: 29410675 PMCID: PMC5787091 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2018.00024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Endophytic microbes isolated and characterized from the seeds of different plants.
| Glucanase production, anti-phytopathogenic microbe | Liu et al., | ||
| – | Glassner et al., | ||
| IAA production, plant growth promotion | Shahzad et al., | ||
| IAA production, phosphate-solubilizing, antifungal, plant growth promotion | Verma et al., | ||
| Phosphorus-solubilizing, protease production, anti-fungal, plant growth promotion | White et al., | ||
| IAA production, antifungal, siderophore production, phosphate-solubilizing, plant growth promotion | Díaz Herrera et al., | ||
| Plant growth promotion, phytohormone and metabolite production | Chimwamurombe et al., | ||
| Phytohormone production, growth promotion | Shahzad et al., | ||
| Plant growth promotion, phytohormone and metabolite production | Xu et al., | ||
| – | Liu et al., | ||
| Antifungal | Sobolev et al., | ||
| – | Rosenblueth et al., | ||
| – | Ringelberg et al., | ||
| Plant growth promotion, mitigating biotic and abiotic stress | Hardoim et al., | ||
| – | Rosenblueth et al., | ||
| Antifungal | Fürnkranz et al., | ||
| Tissue colonization | Compant et al., | ||
| Antibiotic production | Donnarumma et al., | ||
| Phytohormone and metabolite production, phosphate-solubilizing, antifungal, plant growth promotion | Ruiza et al., | ||
| Phytate-solubilizing | López-López et al., | ||
| Mitigating metal toxicity, promote plant growth | Mastretta et al., | ||
| Enzyme production, osmotic stress tolerance | Kaga et al., | ||
| Growth promotion | Ferreira et al., | ||
| Antifungal | Rijavec et al., | ||
| Enzyme production, osmotic stress tolerance | Mano et al., | ||
| – | Vega et al., | ||
| – | Kukkurainen et al., | ||
| Seedling growth, root colonization | Oehrle et al., | ||
| Invasive | Improved seed germination and seedling growth | Shearin et al., | |
| Growth promotion | Khamchatra et al., | ||
| Alkaloid production | Maehara et al., | ||
| Antioxidant potential | Rahmawati et al., | ||
| – | Wiewióra et al., | ||
| Improved resistance against herbivores and environmental stresses | Young et al., | ||
| Improved host plant growth and photosynthesis | Rozpadek et al., | ||
| Hodgson et al., | |||
| – | Ávila-Díaz et al., | ||
| Antimicrobial | Tayung et al., | ||
| – | α –Glucosidase inhibition | Ramdanis et al., | |
| Ergovaline and loline alkaloid production and improved protection against herbivores | Pennell et al., | ||
| Lolium perenne | Improved drought tolerance | Kane, | |
Figure 1Conceptual view of mechanisms of action and vertical transmission of seed endophytic microbiota. (A) The schematic presentation shows the isolation of seed-borne endophytic microbes, and their application in promoting plant growth and stress resistance. (B) A holistic view of the vertical transmission of seed-borne endophytes. This suggests that endophytes are found in seed embryos and grow into the emerging leaf upon germination; the endophytes then migrate into the stem and seed head of reproductive plants via various pathways.