Flavonoid-attracted Aeromonas sp. from the Arabidopsis root microbiome enhances plant dehydration resistance

Flavonoids are stress-inducible metabolites important for plant-microbe interactions. In contrast to their well-known function in initiating rhizobia nodulation in legumes, little is known about whether and how flavonoids may contribute to plant stress resistance through affecting non-nodulating bac...

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Veröffentlicht in:The ISME Journal 2022-11, Vol.16 (11), p.2622-2632
Hauptverfasser: He, Danxia, Singh, Sunil K., Peng, Li, Kaushal, Richa, Vílchez, Juan I., Shao, Chuyang, Wu, Xiaoxuan, Zheng, Shuai, Morcillo, Rafael J. L., Paré, Paul W., Zhang, Huiming
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Flavonoids are stress-inducible metabolites important for plant-microbe interactions. In contrast to their well-known function in initiating rhizobia nodulation in legumes, little is known about whether and how flavonoids may contribute to plant stress resistance through affecting non-nodulating bacteria. Here we show that flavonoids broadly contribute to the diversity of the Arabidopsis root microbiome and preferentially attract Aeromonadaceae , which included a cultivable Aeromonas sp. H1 that displayed flavonoid-induced chemotaxis with transcriptional enhancement of flagellum biogenesis and suppression of fumarate reduction for smooth swims. Strain H1 showed multiple plant-beneficial traits and enhanced plant dehydration resistance, which required flavonoids but not through a sudden “cry-for-help” upon stress. Strain H1 boosted dehydration-induced H 2 O 2 accumulation in guard cells and stomatal closure, concomitant with synergistic induction of jasmonic acid-related regulators of plant dehydration resistance. These findings revealed a key role of flavonoids, and the underlying mechanism, in mediating plant-microbiome interactions including the bacteria-enhanced plant dehydration resistance.
ISSN:1751-7362
1751-7370
1751-7370
DOI:10.1038/s41396-022-01288-7