Lyu Dongmei, Msimbira Levini A, Nazari Mahtab, Antar Mohammed, Pagé Antoine, Shah Ateeq, Monjezi Nadia, Zajonc Jonathan, Tanney Cailun A S, Backer Rachel, Smith Donald L
Department of Plant Science, Macdonald Campus, McGill University, Montreal, QC H9X 3V9, Canada.
National Research Council Canada, Aquatic and Crop Resource Development (ACRD), Montréal, QC H4P 2R2, Canada.
Microorganisms. 2021 May 12;9(5):1036. doi: 10.3390/microorganisms9051036.
Terrestrial plants evolution occurred in the presence of microbes, the phytomicrobiome. The rhizosphere microbial community is the most abundant and diverse subset of the phytomicrobiome and can include both beneficial and parasitic/pathogenic microbes. Prokaryotes of the phytomicrobiome have evolved relationships with plants that range from non-dependent interactions to dependent endosymbionts. The most extreme endosymbiotic examples are the chloroplasts and mitochondria, which have become organelles and integral parts of the plant, leading to some similarity in DNA sequence between plant tissues and cyanobacteria, the prokaryotic symbiont of ancestral plants. Microbes were associated with the precursors of land plants, green algae, and helped algae transition from aquatic to terrestrial environments. In the terrestrial setting the phytomicrobiome contributes to plant growth and development by (1) establishing symbiotic relationships between plant growth-promoting microbes, including rhizobacteria and mycorrhizal fungi, (2) conferring biotic stress resistance by producing antibiotic compounds, and (3) secreting microbe-to-plant signal compounds, such as phytohormones or their analogues, that regulate aspects of plant physiology, including stress resistance. As plants have evolved, they recruited microbes to assist in the adaptation to available growing environments. Microbes serve themselves by promoting plant growth, which in turn provides microbes with nutrition (root exudates, a source of reduced carbon) and a desirable habitat (the rhizosphere or within plant tissues). The outcome of this coevolution is the diverse and metabolically rich microbial community that now exists in the rhizosphere of terrestrial plants. The holobiont, the unit made up of the phytomicrobiome and the plant host, results from this wide range of coevolved relationships. We are just beginning to appreciate the many ways in which this complex and subtle coevolution acts in agricultural systems.
陆生植物的进化发生在微生物(植物微生物组)存在的环境中。根际微生物群落是植物微生物组中数量最多、种类最丰富的子集,其中既包括有益微生物,也包括寄生/致病微生物。植物微生物组中的原核生物与植物形成了从非依赖相互作用到依赖内共生体等多种关系。最极端的内共生例子是叶绿体和线粒体,它们已成为植物的细胞器和不可或缺的组成部分,这导致植物组织与蓝细菌(陆生植物祖先的原核共生体)之间的DNA序列存在一定相似性。微生物与陆地植物的前身绿藻有关联,并帮助藻类从水生环境过渡到陆地环境。在陆地环境中,植物微生物组通过以下方式促进植物生长和发育:(1)在促进植物生长的微生物(包括根际细菌和菌根真菌)之间建立共生关系;(2)通过产生抗生素化合物赋予植物抗生物胁迫能力;(3)分泌微生物到植物的信号化合物,如植物激素或其类似物,来调节植物生理的各个方面,包括抗逆性。随着植物的进化,它们招募微生物来协助适应现有的生长环境。微生物通过促进植物生长来为自身服务,这反过来又为微生物提供了营养(根系分泌物,一种还原碳源)和适宜的栖息地(根际或植物组织内部)。这种共同进化的结果就是如今存在于陆生植物根际的多样且代谢丰富的微生物群落。由植物微生物组和植物宿主组成的共生功能体,就是这种广泛的共同进化关系的产物。我们才刚刚开始认识到这种复杂而微妙的共同进化在农业系统中的多种作用方式。