| Literature DB >> 31672892 |
Víctor J Carrión1,2, Juan Perez-Jaramillo1,3, Viviane Cordovez1,2, Vittorio Tracanna4, Mattias de Hollander1, Daniel Ruiz-Buck1, Lucas W Mendes5, Wilfred F J van Ijcken6, Ruth Gomez-Exposito1,7, Somayah S Elsayed2, Prarthana Mohanraju7, Adini Arifah7, John van der Oost7, Joseph N Paulson8, Rodrigo Mendes9, Gilles P van Wezel1,2, Marnix H Medema10, Jos M Raaijmakers11,2.
Abstract
Microorganisms living inside plants can promote plant growth and health, but their genomic and functional diversity remain largely elusive. Here, metagenomics and network inference show that fungal infection of plant roots enriched for Chitinophagaceae and Flavobacteriaceae in the root endosphere and for chitinase genes and various unknown biosynthetic gene clusters encoding the production of nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) and polyketide synthases (PKSs). After strain-level genome reconstruction, a consortium of Chitinophaga and Flavobacterium was designed that consistently suppressed fungal root disease. Site-directed mutagenesis then revealed that a previously unidentified NRPS-PKS gene cluster from Flavobacterium was essential for disease suppression by the endophytic consortium. Our results highlight that endophytic root microbiomes harbor a wealth of as yet unknown functional traits that, in concert, can protect the plant inside out.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31672892 DOI: 10.1126/science.aaw9285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728