Cell-type-specific transcriptomics reveals that root hairs and endodermal barriers play important roles in beneficial plant-rhizobacterium interactions

Publication date

2023-07-03

Authors

Verbon, Eline HISNI 0000000493299805
Liberman, Louisa M.
Zhou, Jiayu
Yin, Jie
Pieterse, C.M.J.ORCID 0000-0002-5473-4646ISNI 0000000357875345
Benfey, Philip N.
Stringlis, Ioannis AISNI 0000000492960825
de Jonge, RonnieORCID 0000-0001-5065-8538ISNI 0000000389492170

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Growth- and health-promoting bacteria can boost crop productivity in a sustainable way. Pseudomonas simiae WCS417 is such a bacterium that efficiently colonizes roots, modifies the architecture of the root system to increase its size, and induces systemic resistance to make plants more resistant to pests and pathogens. Our previous work suggested that WCS417-induced phenotypes are controlled by root cell-type-specific mechanisms. However, it remains unclear how WCS417 affects these mechanisms. In this study, we transcriptionally profiled five Arabidopsis thaliana root cell types following WCS417 colonization. We found that the cortex and endodermis have the most differentially expressed genes, even though they are not in direct contact with this epiphytic bacterium. Many of these genes are associated with reduced cell wall biogenesis, and mutant analysis suggests that this downregulation facilitates WCS417-driven root architectural changes. Furthermore, we observed elevated expression of suberin biosynthesis genes and increased deposition of suberin in the endodermis of WCS417-colonized roots. Using an endodermal barrier mutant, we showed the importance of endodermal barrier integrity for optimal plant-beneficial bacterium association. Comparison of the transcriptome profiles in the two epidermal cell types that are in direct contact with WCS417—trichoblasts that form root hairs and atrichoblasts that do not—implies a difference in potential for defense gene activation. While both cell types respond to WCS417, trichoblasts displayed both higher basal and WCS417-dependent activation of defense-related genes compared with atrichoblasts. This suggests that root hairs may activate root immunity, a hypothesis that is supported by differential immune responses in root hair mutants. Taken together, these results highlight the strength of cell-type-specific transcriptional profiling to uncover “masked” biological mechanisms underlying beneficial plant-microbe associations.

Keywords

beneficial rhizobacteria, cell-type-specific transcriptomics, FACs, root hair, root immunity, suberin, Molecular Biology, Plant Science

Citation

Verbon, E H, Liberman, L M, Zhou, J, Yin, J, Pieterse, C M J, Benfey, P N, Stringlis, I A & de Jonge, R 2023, 'Cell-type-specific transcriptomics reveals that root hairs and endodermal barriers play important roles in beneficial plant-rhizobacterium interactions', Molecular Plant, vol. 16, no. 7, pp. 1160-1177. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molp.2023.06.001