| Literature DB >> 30295674 |
Min-Jung Kwak1, Hyun Gi Kong2, Kihyuck Choi2, Soon-Kyeong Kwon1, Ju Yeon Song1, Jidam Lee1, Pyeong An Lee2, Soo Yeon Choi2, Minseok Seo3, Hyoung Ju Lee2, Eun Joo Jung2, Hyein Park1, Nazish Roy2, Heebal Kim3,4, Myeong Min Lee1, Edward M Rubin5, Seon-Woo Lee2, Jihyun F Kim1,6.
Abstract
Tomato variety Hawaii 7996 is resistant to the soil-borne pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum, whereas the Moneymaker variety is susceptible to the pathogen. To evaluate whether plant-associated microorganisms have a role in disease resistance, we analyzed the rhizosphere microbiomes of both varieties in a mesocosm experiment. Microbiome structures differed between the two cultivars. Transplantation of rhizosphere microbiota from resistant plants suppressed disease symptoms in susceptible plants. Comparative analyses of rhizosphere metagenomes from resistant and susceptible plants enabled the identification and assembly of a flavobacterial genome that was far more abundant in the resistant plant rhizosphere microbiome than in that of the susceptible plant. We cultivated this flavobacterium, named TRM1, and found that it could suppress R. solanacearum-disease development in a susceptible plant in pot experiments. Our findings reveal a role for native microbiota in protecting plants from microbial pathogens, and our approach charts a path toward the development of probiotics to ameliorate plant diseases.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30295674 DOI: 10.1038/nbt.4232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Biotechnol ISSN: 1087-0156 Impact factor: 54.908