Baltrus David A
School of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, United States; School of Animal and Comparative Biomedical Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, United States.
Curr Opin Plant Biol. 2017 Aug;38:109-116. doi: 10.1016/j.pbi.2017.04.023. Epub 2017 May 22.
Growth patterns of individual plants and evolutionary trajectories of plant communities are intimately linked with and are critically affected by host-associated microbiomes. Research across systems has begun to shed light on how these phytobiomes are established under laboratory and natural conditions, and have cultivated hope that a better understanding of the governing principles for host-microbe interactions can guide attempts to engineer microbiomes to boost agricultural yields. One important, yet relatively understudied, parameter in regards to phytobiome membership is the degree to which specialization and coevolution between plant species and microbes provides structure to these communities. In this article, I provide an overview of mechanisms enabling adaptation and specialization of phytobiome communities to host plants as well as the potential for plants themselves to recruit and cultivate beneficial interactions. I further explore the possibility of host-beneficial microbe coevolution and suggest particular situations that could promote the evolution of such close-knit partnerships. It is my hope that this overview will encourage future experiments that can begin to fill in this black box of ecological and evolutionary interactions across phytobiomes.
个体植物的生长模式和植物群落的进化轨迹与宿主相关的微生物群落密切相关,并受到其严重影响。跨系统研究已开始揭示这些植物微生物群在实验室和自然条件下是如何建立的,并燃起了这样的希望:更好地理解宿主与微生物相互作用的主导原则能够指导改造微生物群以提高农业产量的尝试。关于植物微生物群成员组成,一个重要但相对较少研究的参数是植物物种与微生物之间的特化和共同进化为这些群落提供结构的程度。在本文中,我概述了使植物微生物群群落适应宿主植物并实现特化的机制,以及植物自身招募和培育有益相互作用的潜力。我进一步探讨了宿主与有益微生物共同进化的可能性,并指出了可能促进这种紧密伙伴关系进化的特定情形。我希望这一概述将鼓励未来的实验,这些实验能够开始填补这个植物微生物群生态和进化相互作用的黑匣子。