Abstract

Like all higher organisms, plants have evolved in the context of a microbial world, shaping both their evolution and their contemporary ecology. Interactions between plant roots and soil microorganisms are critical for plant fitness in natural environments. Given this co-evolution and the pivotal importance of plant-microbial interactions, it has been hypothesized, and a growing body of literature suggests, that plants may regulate the composition of their rhizosphere to promote the growth of microorganisms that improve plant fitness in a given ecosystem. Here, using a combination of comparative genomics and exometabolomics, we show that pre-programmed developmental processes in plants (Avena barbata) result in consistent patterns in the chemical composition of root exudates. This chemical succession in the rhizosphere interacts with microbial metabolite substrate preferences that are predictable from genome sequences. Specifically, we observed a preference by rhizosphere bacteria for consumption of aromatic organic acids exuded by plants (nicotinic, shikimic, salicylic, cinnamic and indole-3-acetic). The combination of these plant exudation traits and microbial substrate uptake traits interact to yield the patterns of microbial community assembly observed in the rhizosphere of an annual grass. This discovery provides a mechanistic underpinning for the process of rhizosphere microbial community assembly and provides an attractive direction for the manipulation of the rhizosphere microbiome for beneficial outcomes.

Keywords

ExudateRhizosphereChemistryMicrobial population biologySubstrate (aquarium)BacteriaBotanyBiophysicsBiologyEcology

MeSH Terms

ActinobacteriaAvenaCinnamatesFirmicutesHost Microbial InteractionsIndoleacetic AcidsMicrobiotaNiacinPlant RootsProteobacteriaRhizosphereSalicylic AcidShikimic AcidSoil Microbiology

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
article
Volume
3
Issue
4
Pages
470-480
Citations
2031
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2031
OpenAlex
24
Influential

Cite This

Kateryna Zhalnina, Katherine Louie, Zhao Hao et al. (2018). Dynamic root exudate chemistry and microbial substrate preferences drive patterns in rhizosphere microbial community assembly. Nature Microbiology , 3 (4) , 470-480. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-018-0129-3

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41564-018-0129-3
PMID
29556109

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%