| Literature DB >> 32038698 |
Alberto Pascale1, Silvia Proietti2, Iakovos S Pantelides3, Ioannis A Stringlis4.
Abstract
Plants host a mesmerizing diversity of microbes inside and around their roots, known as the microbiome. The microbiome is composed mostly of fungi, bacteria, oomycetes, and archaea that can be either pathogenic or beneficial for plant health and fitness. To grow healthy, plants need to surveil soil niches around the roots for the detection of pathogenic microbes, and in parallel maximize the services of beneficial microbes in nutrients uptake and growth promotion. Plants employ a palette of mechanisms to modulate their microbiome including structural modifications, the exudation of secondary metabolites and the coordinated action of different defence responses. Here, we review the current understanding on the composition and activity of the root microbiome and how different plant molecules can shape the structure of the root-associated microbial communities. Examples are given on interactions that occur in the rhizosphere between plants and soilborne fungi. We also present some well-established examples of microbiome harnessing to highlight how plants can maximize their fitness by selecting their microbiome. Understanding how plants manipulate their microbiome can aid in the design of next-generation microbial inoculants for targeted disease suppression and enhanced plant growth.Entities:
Keywords: disease suppression; microbial inoculants; microbiota; plant defense; plant growth promotion; plant molecules; root exudation; root microbiome
Year: 2020 PMID: 32038698 PMCID: PMC6992662 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2019.01741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Plants respond to different environmental stresses and modulate their microbiome. (A) Plants not experiencing any biotic stress and having access to nutrients (green pentagons), release constitutively exudates (red arrows) that allow them to sustain a balance in the rhizosphere between pathogenic and beneficial microbes. (B) Upon infection by a pathogen (red microbe), the exudation profile of roots changes and stress-induced exudates (blue arrows) aid the plants in inhibiting pathogenic growth in the rhizosphere, while selecting at the same time for beneficial microbes. Some of these beneficial microbes when they establish themselves in the rhizosphere, can trigger ISR that can help plants deal with pathogenic infections in the leaves. (C) In the case of soil suppressiveness or “cry-for-help” conditions, there is establishment of beneficial rhizosphere communities that are further supported by the release of stress-induced exudates. Under these conditions, soilborne and foliar pathogens fail to cause disease. (D) Plants experiencing nutrient deficiencies (e.g. iron, nitrogen, phosphate) change the metabolomic profile of their roots to either make nutrients more available and soluble or to attract beneficial microbes (e.g. rhizobia, AMF, PGPR) that can help them deal with the nutrient deficiency. Font size indicates the abundance of beneficial or pathogenic subsets of the microbiota under different conditions. The figure was designed with Biorender (https://biorender.com).
Representative studies where plants under different stresses can select/modulate the assembly of the root-associated microbiome. For each study (when possible) the trigger leading to plant activity that modulates the microbiome, the identified mechanism of action, the effect on the microbiome, the host plant and the reference is mentioned.
| Trigger | Mechanisms | Effect | Host | Reference |
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| Disease -induced recruitment from suppressive compost | Enrichment of Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Firmicutes ( | Tomato |
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| Legacy-mediated development of soil suppressiveness | Assemblage of beneficial rhizosphere microbiome | Arabidopsis/Tomato |
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| Activation of bacterial stress responses and activation of antagonistic traits that restrict pathogen infection | Shifts in microbiome composition and enrichment of | Sugar beet |
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| Chemoattraction induced by root-exuded peroxidases and oxylipins | Attraction of | Tomato; Cucumber |
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| Pathogen-induced taxa enrichment from suppressive soils | Recruitment of specific taxa from rhizosphere of sugar beet infected with | Sugar beet |
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| Root-secreted malic acid | Recruitment of | Arabidopsis |
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| Disease-induced recruitment of beneficial microbes from | Increase of taxa associated to Fusarium wilt suppressiveness | Flax |
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| Huanglongbing (HLB) caused by | Putative mechanisms: HLB significantly altered the structure or functional potential of the citrus endosphere | Decrease in abundance of taxa and loss of functions in the rhizoplane-rhizosphere enriched microbiome of HLB- infected citrus roots | Citrus |
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| Aphids | Elicitation of plant immunity | Recruitment of the beneficial bacteria | Pepper |
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| Whitefly | Whitefly infestation elicited SA and JA signaling in above and below ground tissues and overexpression of PR genes in the roots resulting in a differential microbiome assembly | The differential microbiome assembly induced resistance against to | Pepper |
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| Phosphate deficiency | Phosphate starvation response | Differential assemblage of bacterial and fungal microbiota | Arabidopsis |
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| Gradients of phosphate, salinity, pH, temperature | - | Assembly of different modules of co-occurring strains | Arabidopsis |
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| wounding; salt stress | Chemoattraction induced by root-exuded peroxidases and oxylipins | Exudates attracted | Tomato; Cucumber |
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| Iron deficiency/colonization by PGPR | Increased accumulation and secretion of the coumarin scopoletin exerts selective antimicrobial activity in rhizosphere | Differential microbiome assembly, repelling potential against phytopathogens and thus, recruiting potential beneficial microbes | Arabidopsis |
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| Iron deficiency | Catecholic coumarins show differential antimicrobial activity | Shift in microbial composition of SynCom | Arabidopsis |
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| - | Overexpression of genes involved biosynthesis and transport of root-exuded secondary metabolites | Greater abundance of potentially beneficial bacteria | Arabidopsis |
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| - | Differential exudation of root secondary metabolites regulated by Benzoxazinoids (BXs) | Enrichment of | Maize |
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| - | Benzoxazinoids (BXs) drive plant-soil feedback | BXs shape the microbiota of the next generation of plants | Maize |
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| - | Differential secretion of triterpene-derived metabolites by altering triterpene gene cluster | Differential assembly of Arabidopsis root microbiome | Arabidopsis |
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| - | Microbial sulfatase cleaves root-exuded sulfate esters produced by the camalexin biosynthetic pathway | Stimulation of microbial sulfatase activity in soil and is required for the plant growth-promoting effects of several bacterial strains | Arabidopsis |
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| - | Assembly of differential microbiome between tomato cultivars susceptible and resistant to | Enrichment of | Tomato |
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| SA | Compromised innate immune system impairing SA biosynthetic pathway | SA-dependent modulation of root microbiome and enrichment of | Arabidopsis |
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| - | DIMBOA Benzoxazinoids (BXs) induce chemotaxis-associated genes in | Enhanced rhizosphere colonization by | Maize |
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| ACC; JA | ACC and JA application, induced altered expression of PRR and RLK and cell wall biosynthesis and maintenance related genes | Inhibition of the secondary stage of root colonization by | Poplar |
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Figure 2Integration of modern technologies to engineer microbial inoculants that boost plant growth and suppress pathogens. Plants respond to stresses and change their exudation. To unravel how changes in exudation affect microbiome composition and functions, we need to couple advance metabolomic techniques with metagenomics sequencing (A) and culture-based methodologies (B). At the same time, there is promise for the use of exometabolomics methodologies and spatial metabolomics that can help in finding where specific exudates are produced and how the microbes around the exudation site are affected (C). Analysis of the generated data in depth will allow the characterization of the microbial communities that respond to exudates and the identification of networks that will reveal how microbes interact and contribute in the microbiome assembly (A). The parallel isolation of a representative fraction of the root microbiome (B) will allow to link descriptive data with the isolated microbes and will guide the design of synthetic communities (D). Testing of these synthetic communities with different hosts under different conditions (e.g. biotic/abiotic stress/in vitro/in soil/in field) will facilitate the selection of synthetic communities that can promote plant growth (E) and suppress pathogens (F) in a consistent and reproducible manner. The figure was designed with Biorender (https://biorender.com/).