The Impact of Beneficial Plant-Associated Microbes on Plant Phenotypic Plasticity

被引:0
|
作者
Chooi-Hua Goh
Debora F. Veliz Vallejos
Adrienne B. Nicotra
Ulrike Mathesius
机构
[1] Australian National University,Department of Plant Science
[2] Australian National University,Department of Evolution, Ecology and Genetics, Research School of Biology
来源
Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2013年 / 39卷
关键词
Fitness; Mycorrhizal fungi; Nodulation; Phenotypic plasticity; Plant endophytes; Plant growth promoting rhizobacteria; Quorum sensing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Plants show phenotypic plasticity in response to changing or extreme abiotic environments; but over millions of years they also have co-evolved to respond to the presence of soil microbes. Studies on phenotypic plasticity in plants have focused mainly on the effects of the changing environments on plants’ growth and survival. Evidence is now accumulating that the presence of microbes can alter plant phenotypic plasticity in a broad range of traits in response to a changing environment. In this review, we discuss the effects of microbes on plant phenotypic plasticity in response to changing environmental conditions, and how this may affect plant fitness. By using a range of specific plant-microbe interactions as examples, we demonstrate that one way that microbes can alleviate the effect of environmental stress on plants and thus increase plant fitness is to remove the stress, e.g., nutrient limitation, directly. Furthermore, microbes indirectly affect plant phenotypic plasticity and fitness through modulation of plant development and defense responses. In doing so, microbes affect fitness by both increasing or decreasing the degree of phenotypic plasticity, depending on the phenotype and the environmental stress studied, with no clear difference between the effect of prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbes in general. Additionally, plants have the ability to modulate microbial behaviors, suggesting that they manipulate bacteria, enhancing interactions that help them cope with stressful environments. Future challenges remain in the identification of the many microbial signals that modulate phenotypic plasticity, the characterization of plant genes, e.g. receptors, that mediate the microbial effects on plasticity, and the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms that link phenotypic plasticity with fitness. The characterization of plant and microbial mutants defective in signal synthesis or perception, together with carefully designed glasshouse or field experiments that test various environmental stresses will be necessary to understand the link between molecular mechanisms controlling plastic phenotypes with the resulting effects on plant fitness.
引用
收藏
页码:826 / 839
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Beyond the Wall: Exopolysaccharides in the Biofilm Lifestyle of Pathogenic and Beneficial Plant-Associated Pseudomonas
    Heredia-Ponce, Zaira
    de Vicente, Antonio
    Cazorla, Francisco M.
    Gutierrez-Barranquero, Jose Antonio
    MICROORGANISMS, 2021, 9 (02) : 1 - 17
  • [32] Riboregulation in plant-associated α-proteobacteria
    Becker, Anke
    Overloeper, Aaron
    Schlueter, Jan-Philip
    Reinkensmeier, Jan
    Robledo, Marta
    Giegerich, Robert
    Narberhaus, Franz
    Evguenieva-Hackenberg, Elena
    RNA BIOLOGY, 2014, 11 (05) : 550 - 562
  • [33] Identification of plant-associated enterococci
    Müller, T
    Ulrich, A
    Ott, EM
    Müller, M
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, 2001, 91 (02) : 268 - 278
  • [34] Genomes of Plant-Associated Clavicipitaceae
    Schardl, Christopher L.
    Young, Carolyn A.
    Moore, Neil
    Krom, Nicholas
    Dupont, Pierre-Yves
    Pan, Juan
    Florea, Simona
    Webb, Jennifer S.
    Jaromczyk, Jolanta
    Jaromczyk, Jerzy W.
    Cox, Murray P.
    Farman, Mark L.
    FUNGI, 2014, 70 : 291 - 327
  • [35] Tropical plant-associated nephropathy
    Eiam-Ong, S
    Sitprija, V
    NEPHROLOGY, 1998, 4 (5-6) : 313 - 319
  • [36] Phenotypic plasticity and plant adaptation
    Sultan, SE
    ACTA BOTANICA NEERLANDICA, 1995, 44 (04): : 363 - 383
  • [37] Burkholderia phytofirmans sp. nov., a novel plant-associated bacterium with plant-beneficial properties
    Sessitsch, A
    Coenye, T
    Sturz, AV
    Vandamme, P
    Barka, EA
    Salles, JF
    Van Elsas, JD
    Faure, D
    Reiter, B
    Glick, BR
    Wang-Pruski, G
    Nowak, J
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC AND EVOLUTIONARY MICROBIOLOGY, 2005, 55 : 1187 - 1192
  • [38] Beneficial microbes protect plants with plant hormones
    不详
    INTERNATIONAL SUGAR JOURNAL, 2016, 118 (1410): : 411 - 411
  • [39] Plant immune responses triggered by beneficial microbes
    Van Wees, Saskia C. M.
    Van der Ent, Sjoerd
    Pieterse, Corne M. J.
    CURRENT OPINION IN PLANT BIOLOGY, 2008, 11 (04) : 443 - 448
  • [40] Beneficial Plant-Associated Microorganisms From Semiarid Regions and Seasonally Dry Environments: A Review
    Bonatelli, Maria Leticia
    Lacerda-Junior, Gileno Vieira
    dos Reis Junior, Fabio Bueno
    Fernandes-Junior, Paulo Ivan
    Melo, Itamar Soares
    Quecine, Maria Carolina
    FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2021, 11