Rhizobacteria opportunistically boost colonization and impair plant fitness by degrading plant-derived coumarins under iron deficiency.
Gu Y, Pan P, Yu G, Zhou NY
Summary
7.8/10Researchers discovered that certain root bacteria can exploit stressed plants by breaking down chemical compounds plants produce to help absorb iron. This bacterial attack prevents plants from getting iron and reduces their overall health, revealing a previously underappreciated way that microbes can harm their plant hosts.
Key Findings
Pseudomonas sp. strain NyZ480 possesses redundant xenA genes enabling degradation of coumarins and resistance to their antimicrobial effects
NyZ480 significantly colonizes iron-stressed Arabidopsis roots, trapping plants in perpetual iron scarcity and impairing overall fitness
xenA homologs are prevalent and redundant across environmental bacteria, indicating this opportunistic plant-harming strategy is widespread in nature
Original Abstract
Plants recruit root-associated bacterial assemblies primarily through the secretion of specialized metabolites, and the resultant rhizospheric microbiota is empirically considered beneficial. However, detrimental effects on plants arising from bacterial colonization that exploits plant-derived metabolites are rarely documented. Here, we demonstrate that the rhizosphere-derived Pseudomonas sp. strain NyZ480 exhibits a versatile capacity to effectively degrade and utilize simple coumarins-a class of root exudates essential for plant iron acquisition and pathogen defense. This robust catabolic capability is mediated by conserved genetic determinants in NyZ480. In particular, redundant degradation-initiating xenA genes confer NyZ480 not only growth using simple coumarins but also resistance to these antimicrobial metabolites. Consequently, NyZ480 significantly colonizes iron-stressed, coumarin-secreting Arabidopsis roots, trapping plants in perpetual iron scarcity and progressively compromising iron acquisition and overall fitness. Bioinformatic analyses indicate that xenA homologs are prevalent and redundant in environmental bacteria. Thus, we reveal a rhizospheric phenomenon where microorganisms opportunistically utilize and detoxify host-secreted specialized metabolites under stress conditions, enhancing colonization and impairing plant fitness.
Species Mentioned
Arabidopsis (rockcress) is a genus of small flowering plants in the cabbage and mustard family, Brassicaceae. Arabidopsis species are native to temperate and subarctic Eurasia and North America, North Africa, and the mountains of eastern tropical Africa. This genus is of great interest since it c...
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