Gu Shaohua, Yang Tianjie, Shao Zhengying, Wang Tao, Cao Kehao, Jousset Alexandre, Friman Ville-Petri, Mallon Cyrus, Mei Xinlan, Wei Zhong, Xu Yangchun, Shen Qirong, Pommier Thomas
Jiangsu Provincial Key Lab for Organic Solid Waste Utilization, Key Lab of Plant Immunity, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Solid Organic Waste Resource Utilization, National Engineering Research Center for Organic-based Fertilizers, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing, People's Republic of China.
Department of Biology, University of York, York, United Kingdom.
mSystems. 2020 Jun 30;5(3):e00811-19. doi: 10.1128/mSystems.00811-19.
Interactions between plant pathogens and root-associated microbes play an important role in determining disease outcomes. While several studies have suggested that steering these interactions may improve plant health, such approaches have remained challenging in practice. Because of low iron availability in most soils, competition for iron via secreted siderophore molecules might influence microbial interaction outcomes. Here, we tested if bacterial interactions mediated by iron-scavenging siderophores can be used to predict the disease suppressiveness of microbial consortia against soilborne , a bacterial pathogen in the tomato rhizosphere. Iron availability significantly affected the interactions within inoculated consortia and between the consortia and the pathogen. We observed contrasting effects of siderophores and other nonsiderophore metabolites on the pathogen growth, while the siderophore effects were relatively much stronger. Specifically, disease incidence was reduced when the inoculated consortia produced siderophores that the pathogen could not use for its own growth. Employing siderophore-mediated interactions to engineer functionally robust microbial inoculants shows promise in protecting plants from soilborne pathogens. Soil-borne pathogens cause high losses in crop yields globally. The development of environmentally friendly approaches is urgently needed, but is often constrained by complex interactions between root-associated microbes and pathogens. Here, we demonstrate that the interactions within microbial consortia mediated by iron-scavenging siderophores play an important role in reducing pathogen infection and enhancing plant health. This study provides a promising and novel research direction for dealing with a wide range of microbial infections through iron exploitation, which is important for the colonization and infection of both plant and human hosts by pathogens.
植物病原体与根际微生物之间的相互作用在决定病害结果方面起着重要作用。虽然多项研究表明,调控这些相互作用可能会改善植物健康,但在实践中,此类方法仍然具有挑战性。由于大多数土壤中铁的有效性较低,通过分泌铁载体分子来竞争铁可能会影响微生物相互作用的结果。在此,我们测试了由铁清除型铁载体介导的细菌相互作用是否可用于预测微生物群落对番茄根际土传细菌病原体的病害抑制能力。铁的有效性显著影响接种群落内部以及群落与病原体之间的相互作用。我们观察到铁载体和其他非铁载体代谢产物对病原体生长有不同的影响,而铁载体的影响相对更强。具体而言,当接种的群落产生病原体无法用于自身生长的铁载体时,病害发生率降低。利用铁载体介导的相互作用来构建功能强大的微生物接种剂,有望保护植物免受土传病原体的侵害。土传病原体在全球范围内导致作物产量大幅损失。迫切需要开发环境友好型方法,但这些方法往往受到根际微生物与病原体之间复杂相互作用的限制。在此,我们证明了由铁清除型铁载体介导的微生物群落内部相互作用在减少病原体感染和增强植物健康方面起着重要作用。本研究为通过铁利用来应对广泛的微生物感染提供了一个有前景的新研究方向,这对于病原体在植物和人类宿主中的定殖和感染都很重要。