Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Plant-derived coumarins shape the composition of an <i>Arabidopsis</i> synthetic root microbiome

465

Citations

29

References

2019

Year

Abstract

The factors that contribute to the composition of the root microbiome and, in turn, affect plant fitness are not well understood. Recent work has highlighted a major contribution of the soil inoculum in determining the composition of the root microbiome. However, plants are known to conditionally exude a diverse array of unique secondary metabolites, that vary among species and environmental conditions and can interact with the surrounding biota. Here, we explore the role of specialized metabolites in dictating which bacteria reside in the rhizosphere. We employed a reduced synthetic community (SynCom) of <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i> root-isolated bacteria to detect community shifts that occur in the absence of the secreted small-molecule phytoalexins, flavonoids, and coumarins. We find that lack of coumarin biosynthesis in <i>f6</i>'<i>h1</i> mutant plant lines causes a shift in the root microbial community specifically under iron deficiency. We demonstrate a potential role for iron-mobilizing coumarins in sculpting the <i>A. thaliana</i> root bacterial community by inhibiting the proliferation of a relatively abundant <i>Pseudomonas</i> species via a redox-mediated mechanism. This work establishes a systematic approach enabling elucidation of specific mechanisms by which plant-derived molecules mediate microbial community composition. Our findings expand on the function of conditionally exuded specialized metabolites and suggest avenues to effectively engineer the rhizosphere with the aim of improving crop growth in iron-limited alkaline soils, which make up a third of the world's arable soils.

References

YearCitations

Page 1