| Literature DB >> 31065398 |
Gary E Harman1, Norman Uphoff1.
Abstract
Plants should not be regarded as entities unto themselves, but as the visible part of plant-microbe complexes which are best understood as "holobiomes." Some microorganisms when given the opportunity to inhabit plant roots become root symbionts. Such root colonization by symbiotic microbes can raise crop yields by promoting the growth of both shoots and roots, by enhancing uptake, fixation, and/or more efficient use of nutrients, by improving plants' resistance to pests, diseases, and abiotic stresses that include drought, salt, and other environmental conditions, and by enhancing plants' capacity for photosynthesis. We refer plant-microbe associations with these capabilities that have been purposefully established as enhanced plant holobiomes (EPHs). Here, we consider four groups of phylogenetically distinct and distant symbiotic endophytes: (1) Rhizobiaceae bacteria; (2) plant-obligate arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF); (3) selected endophytic strains of fungi in the genus Trichoderma; and (4) fungi in the Sebicales order, specifically Piriformospora indica. Although these exhibit quite different "lifestyles" when inhabiting plants, all induce beneficial systemic changes in plants' gene expression that are surprisingly similar. For example, all induce gene expression that produces proteins which detoxify reactive oxygen species (ROS). ROS are increased by environmental stresses on plants or by overexcitation of photosynthetic pigments. Gene overexpression results in a cellular environment where ROS levels are controlled and made more compatible with plants' metabolic processes. EPHs also frequently exhibit increased rates of photosynthesis that contribute to greater plant growth and other capabilities. Soil organic matter (SOM) is augmented when plant root growth is increased and roots remain in the soil. The combination of enhanced photosynthesis, increasing sequestration of CO2 from the air, and elevation of SOM removes C from the atmosphere and stores it in the soil. Reductions in global greenhouse gas levels can be accelerated by incentives for carbon farming and carbon cap-and-trade programs that reward such climate-friendly agriculture. The development and spread of EPHs as part of such initiatives has potential both to enhance farm productivity and incomes and to decelerate global warming.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31065398 PMCID: PMC6466867 DOI: 10.1155/2019/9106395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientifica (Cairo) ISSN: 2090-908X
Examples of the abilities of endophytic symbiotic microorganisms and their SAMPs to increase plants' productivity and yield.
| Symbiotic microbes | Crop | Effects |
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| Rhizobiaceae | Soybean | Meta-analysis showed −6 to 176% increase in soybean yields across 28 studies [ |
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| Commercial | Soybean | On farmer fields in Michigan, yields were increased by 23–45% where inoculants had not been used previously. Average yield increased 2-3% where inoculants had previously been used [ |
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| Common bean | Increases of 2–3.5 t/ha under dry conditions [ |
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| Rice, wheat, and corn [ | Increases in yield were seen under field conditions. With corn, not all plant genotype-microbial combinations increased yield. |
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| AMF | Numerous crops | Across numerous studies in the literature, AMF inoculation has resulted in increases in yield but not statistically different from zero. In grasses, the combination of aerially applied endophytic fungi and AMF gave greater than expected results than from either alone [ |
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| AMF ( | Watermelon | Increased shoot and root growth seen compared to untreated controls in drought but not well-watered conditions. Inactivation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by gene expression changes was required [ |
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| Over 150 plant species | Various studies have identified plant growth-promoting activities of plants whose roots were colonized by |
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| Barley |
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| Numerous plant species | Inoculation with the organism induced increased growth responses in numerous vegetable species [ |
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| Tomato, corn | Seed treatments applied to corn or tomato resulted in endophytic colonization of plant roots. This colonization is associated with increased resistance to stresses and is causally associated with higher levels of expression of enzymes that inactivate ROS [ |
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| Grapes | Application, even to the soil, increased fruit yield and increased total amount of polyphenols [ |
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| SAMPS | Derived from: | |
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| Chitooligosaccharides (COs) and lipochitooligosaccharides (LCOs) | Rhizobiaceae and AMF [ | Increased seedling growth of roots; increased yields of corn and other crops including leaf area, shoot mass, and root mass; root branching; increased photosynthesis; changes in plant gene expression; induced resistance to plant diseases. LCOs are produced by the bacteria, but COs may elicit similar plant responses. These compounds added to plants of many kinds result in season-long disease resistance and plant yield increases [ |
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| 6-Pentyl- |
| Application of this volatile unsaturated lactone molecule, even to the soil, increased fruit yield and increased the total amount of polyphenols as effectively as did treatments with the organism [ |
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| 1-Octen-3-ol (1o3) | Various | Seed treatments with picoliter quantities of this volatile metabolite resulted in season-long improvements to shoot and root growth in corn as effectively as did treatments with the fungus itself [ |
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| Harzianic acid (HzA) | Various | This has both antifungal and growth promotive activities and acts as a siderophore to chelate iron [ |
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| Peptabiols (Pb) | Various | These induced plant defense responses and are inhibitory to soil microflora. These are peptides, and hundreds of separate compounds have been identified [ |
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| Hydrophobins and other hydrophobin-like proteins (Hp) | Various | These hydrophobic proteins induce plant resistance and increase plant growth [ |
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| Plant response-like protein |
| Induces immunity to a virus, a fungus, a bacterium, and an oomycete plant pathogen [ |
Figure 1Plant endophytic symbiotic microorganisms are able to enhance plant growth and development from seedlings to maturity, as evidenced by these examples from the use of Trichoderma with corn. (a) Ten-day-old seedlings of an inbred maize line (Mo17) grown from untreated seeds (upper row) or from seeds treated with T. afrohazianum (lower row). The differences in size that are seen in the seedlings persist in the mature plants. (b) Appearance of corn plants in a commercial trial in Minnesota. The plant on the right was grown from a seed treated with a commercial product containing T. afroharzianum and T. atroviride overtreated onto a standard chemical pesticide, while the plant on the left grew from a seed treated only with a chemical pesticide. Photo courtesy of Advanced Biological Marketing. (c) Both the organisms and their SAMPs can induce season-long changes that affect both shoots and roots. Shown are roots of mature corn plants grown from either seeds treated only with a chemical pesticide (left) or with similar seeds overtreated with the SAMP 1-octen-3-ol at picoliter quantities (right). The observed increase in root growth is distant both temporally (several months later) and spatially from the site of application of the SAMP. Photo courtesy of Advanced Biological Marketing. (d) Trichoderma strains increase rooting depth. Corn plants were grown in the field to maturity, and then, trenches were dug adjacent to them about 2.3 m deep. The soil faces next to the plants were treated with a power washer to expose root intercepts and were marked with map pins that show up as dots in the figure. At 25–75 cm below the soil surface, there were about twice as many roots from plants grown from Trichoderma-treated seeds as from untreated seeds [6].
Examples of control or inhibition of plant pathogens or pests by endophytic plant microbes.
| Disease or pathogen | Symbiont | Plant | Response of plants to endophytes | Reference |
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| Numerous soil pathogens, including | Various rhizobia | Legumes, including soybean, chickpea, pea, lentil, lupine, and fava bean | Control of many pathogens | [ |
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| Bradyrhizobium japonicum | Soybean | The bacteria also colonized the pathogen | [ |
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| Indian mustard | Nearly complete control of white rot | [ |
| Powdery mildew | AMF ( | Barley | Induced resistance gave a high degree of control | [ |
| Tomato leaf curl virus | AMF ( | Tomato | Systemic resistance reduced disease severity | [ |
| Phytophthora late blight | AMF ( | Potato | Symptoms reduced, but not under conditions of high disease pressure | [ |
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| AMF ( | Madagascar periwinkle | Control occurred, but another pathogen was not controlled | [ |
| Various nematodes | AMF | Various plants in summary | Wide variety of plants are protected against these round worms | [ |
| Numerous root rot pathogens including |
| Various plants and pathogens in summary | Wide variety of plants protected against these fungal pathogens | [ |
| Fungal diseases of leaves, including |
| Chickpea, barley, and others | Disease control of above-ground parts even though symbiont only in roots; antioxidant systems are important | [ |
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| Wheat | Grain disease occurred even though symbiont was only in roots; also reduced | [ |
| Various root and foliar pathogens |
| Various plants | Numerous examples of control of pathogens in roots and above-ground plant organs | [ |
| Various root nematodes |
| Tomato | Control occurred with systemic control demonstrated using split-root plants | [ |
Figure 2Packing of Trichoderma viride biofertilizers in a village production center in Tamil Nadu state of India initiated by the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation in Chennai [109].
| Seedling root biomass (g) | Seedling canopy biomass (g) | Rate of photosynthesis ( | Stomatal conductance (mmol·m−2·s−1) | Internal CO2 concentration (ppm) | Chlorophyll | Panicle number | Filled grains (%) | |
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| Trich w/std mgmt | 14.25b | 12.68c | 5.19b | 527.99b | 376.93a | 1.34b | 8.93b | 58.33b |
| SRI w/o Trich | 16.72ab | 15.46b | 5.15b | 513.91b | 364.10a | 1.44b | 8.66b | 61.20b |
| SRI + Trich | 23.75a | 21.38a | 7.81a | 827.31a | 314.39b | 1.96a | 12.73a | 88.00a |
There were no significant differences for chlorophyll b in the leaves Source: [123]. Treatments and methods are explained in that publication.
Figure 3Diagrammatic presentation of how plants and their photosystems are protected from damage by ROS, which is induced by both stress and by photoexcitation. All of the endophytes described in this article have the ability to countervail ROS damage. We hypothesize that this result occurs in better-functioning plants that have optimized internal redox potential.
Figure 4Summary of groups of endophytic microorganisms considered in this paper and summary of mechanisms and systems by which they enhance plant productivity.