Abstract

ABSTRACTSoil-dwelling microorganisms associated with plant roots carry out essential processes that promote plant growth and productivity. In addition to these beneficial functions, the rhizosphere microbiome also serves as the first line of defense against many plant pathogens. While many rhizobacteria are capable of producing antifungal natural products, fungal pathogens, such as those belonging to the genus Fusarium, continue to be a major threat to agricultural crops worldwide. In this issue, Tracanna and coworkers (V. Tracanna, A. Ossowicki, M. L. C. Petrus, S. Overduin, et al., mSystems 6:e01116-20, 2021, https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.01116-20) implement a targeted amplicon sequencing approach to identify conserved domains and specific metabolic pathways shared among soil samples with antagonistic activities against Fusarium culmorum. They also introduce dom2BGC, an open-source annotation platform that builds co-occurrence networks of natural product-associated domains across samples and aids in putative gene cluster reconstruction. When coupled with metagenomics, functional amplicon sequencing and the dom2BGC pipeline can aid in identifying mechanisms and potential metabolites associated with particular microbiome-associated phenotypes.

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