Plant-Driven Assembly of Disease-Suppressive Soil Microbiomes

Publication date

2024-09-01

Authors

Spooren, JelleISNI 0000000493066374
Van Bentum, SietskeISNI 0000000493043930
Thomashow, Linda S.
Pieterse, C.M.J.ORCID 0000-0002-5473-4646ISNI 0000000357875345
Weller, David M.
Berendsen, Roeland LISNI 0000000393112425

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Plants have coevolved together with the microbes that surround them and this assemblage of host and microbes functions as a discrete ecological unit called a holobiont. This review outlines plant-driven assembly of disease-suppressive microbiomes. Plants are colonized by microbes from seed, soil, and air but selectively shape the microbiome with root exudates, creating microenvironment hot spots where microbes thrive. Using plant immunity for gatekeeping and surveillance, host-plant genetic properties govern microbiome assembly and can confer adaptive advantages to the holobiont. These advantages manifest in disease-suppressive soils, where buildup of specific microbes inhibits the causal agent of disease, that typically develop after an initial disease outbreak. Based on disease-suppressive soils such as take-all decline, we developed a conceptual model of how plants in response to pathogen attack cry for help and recruit plant-protective microbes that confer increased resistance. Thereby, plants create a soilborne legacy that protects subsequent generations and forms disease-suppressive soils.

Keywords

cry for help, disease-suppressive soil, holobiont, microbiome, soilborne legacy, take-all decline, Plant Science

Citation

Spooren, J, van Bentum, S, Thomashow, L S, Pieterse, C M J, Weller, D M & Berendsen, R L 2024, 'Plant-Driven Assembly of Disease-Suppressive Soil Microbiomes', Annual Review of Phytopathology, vol. 62, no. 1, pp. 1-30. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-phyto-021622-100127