Abstract

Microbes of the phytomicrobiome are associated with every plant tissue and, in combination with the plant form the holobiont. Plants regulate the composition and activity of their associated bacterial community carefully. These microbes provide a wide range of services and benefits to the plant; in return, the plant provides the microbial community with reduced carbon and other metabolites. Soils are generally a moist environment, rich in reduced carbon which supports extensive soil microbial communities. The rhizomicrobiome is of great importance to agriculture owing to the rich diversity of root exudates and plant cell debris that attract diverse and unique patterns of microbial colonization. Microbes of the rhizomicrobiome play key roles in nutrient acquisition and assimilation, improved soil texture, secreting, and modulating extracellular molecules such as hormones, secondary metabolites, antibiotics, and various signal compounds, all leading to enhancement of plant growth. The microbes and compounds they secrete constitute valuable biostimulants and play pivotal roles in modulating plant stress responses. Research has demonstrated that inoculating plants with plant-growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) or treating plants with microbe-to-plant signal compounds can be an effective strategy to stimulate crop growth. Furthermore, these strategies can improve crop tolerance for the abiotic stresses (e.g., drought, heat, and salinity) likely to become more frequent as climate change conditions continue to develop. This discovery has resulted in multifunctional PGPR-based formulations for commercial agriculture, to minimize the use of synthetic fertilizers and agrochemicals. This review is an update about the role of PGPR in agriculture, from their collection to commercialization as low-cost commercial agricultural inputs. First, we introduce the concept and role of the phytomicrobiome and the agricultural context underlying food security in the 21st century. Next, mechanisms of plant growth promotion by PGPR are discussed, including signal exchange between plant roots and PGPR and how these relationships modulate plant abiotic stress responses via induced systemic resistance. On the application side, strategies are discussed to improve rhizosphere colonization by PGPR inoculants. The final sections of the paper describe the applications of PGPR in 21st century agriculture and the roadmap to commercialization of a PGPR-based technology.

Highlights

  • A plant growing under field conditions is not an individual; it is a complex community (Lundberg et al, 2012) with subtle and relatively constant partner relationships

  • We have examined the steps necessary to develop these technologies into products and have them approved for sale through the regulatory process

  • Random and relentless, and we should expect to discover many additional and sometimes surprising relationships that are beneficial to crops, and global food production

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A plant growing under field conditions is not an individual; it is a complex community (Lundberg et al, 2012) with subtle and relatively constant partner relationships. PGPR that produce auxins have been shown to elicit transcriptional changes in hormone, defense-related, and cell wall related genes (Spaepen et al, 2014), induce longer roots (Hong et al, 1991), increase root biomass and decrease stomata size and density (Llorente et al, 2016), and activate auxin response genes that enhance plant growth (Ruzzi and Aroca, 2015). Many studies have shown enhanced stress tolerance in plants through inoculation with PGPR that produce ACC deaminase.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call