Enabling sustainable agriculture through understanding and enhancement of microbiomes
- PMID: 33657660
- DOI: 10.1111/nph.17319
Enabling sustainable agriculture through understanding and enhancement of microbiomes
Abstract
Harnessing plant-associated microbiomes offers an invaluable strategy to help agricultural production become more sustainable while also meeting growing demands for food, feed and fiber. A plethora of interconnected interactions among the host, environment and microbes, occurring both above and below ground, drive recognition, recruitment and colonization of plant-associated microbes, resulting in activation of downstream host responses and functionality. Dissecting these complex interactions by integrating multiomic approaches, high-throughput culturing, and computational and synthetic biology advances is providing deeper understanding of the structure and function of native microbial communities. Such insights are paving the way towards development of microbial products as well as microbiomes engineered with synthetic microbial communities capable of delivering agronomic solutions. While there is a growing market for microbial-based solutions to improve crop productivity, challenges with commercialization of these products remain. The continued translation of plant-associated microbiome knowledge into real-world scenarios will require concerted transdisciplinary research, cross-training of a next generation of scientists, and targeted educational efforts to prime growers and the general public for successful adoption of these innovative technologies.
Keywords: agricultural microbiome; biopesticides; culturomics; multiomic technologies; phytobiome; synthetic communities.
© 2021 The Authors New Phytologist © 2021 New Phytologist Foundation.
References
-
- Adeniji AA, Babalola OO, Loots DT. 2020. Metabolomic applications for understanding complex tripartite plant-microbes interactions: strategies and perspectives. Biotechnology Reports 25: e00425.
-
- Agler MT, Ruhe J, Kroll S, Morhenn C, Kim ST, Weigel D, Kemen EM. 2016. Microbial hub taxa link host and abiotic factors to plant microbiome variation. PLoS Biology 14: e1002352.
-
- Arias-Sanchez FI, Vessman B, Mitri S. 2019. Artificially selecting microbial communities: if we can breed dogs, why not microbiomes? PLoS Biology 17: e3000356.
-
- Badri DV, Zolla G, Bakker MG, Manter DK, Vivanco JM. 2013. Potential impact of soil microbiomes on the leaf metabolome and on herbivore feeding behavior. New Phytologist 198: 264-273.
-
- Bai Y, Muller DB, Srinivas G, Garrido-Oter R, Potthoff E, Rott M, Dombrowski N, Munch PC, Spaepen S, Remus-Emsermann M et al. 2015. Functional overlap of the Arabidopsis leaf and root microbiota. Nature 528: 364-369.