Journal
FEMS MICROBIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 366, Issue 18, Pages -Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/femsle/fnz217
Keywords
agricultural microbiomes; coevolution; evolutionary ecology; linkage disequilibrium; mutualism; rhizobia-legume symbiosis
Categories
Funding
- National Science Foundation [1821892, 1342793]
- National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch project [1014527]
- Division Of Environmental Biology
- Direct For Biological Sciences [1342793, 1821892] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
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Stabilizing mechanisms in plant-microbe symbioses are critical to maintaining beneficial functions, with two main classes: host sanctions and partner choice. Sanctions are currently presumed to be more effective and widespread, based on the idea that microbes rapidly evolve cheating while retaining signals matching cooperative strains. However, hosts that effectively discriminate among a pool of compatible symbionts would gain a significant fitness advantage. Using the well-characterized legume-rhizobium symbiosis as a model, we evaluate the evidence for partner choice in the context of the growing field of genomics. Empirical studies that rely upon bacteria varying only in nitrogen-fixation ability ignore host-symbiont signaling and frequently conclude that partner choice is not a robust stabilizing mechanism. Here, we argue that partner choice is an overlooked mechanism of mutualism stability and emphasize that plants need not use the microbial services provided a priori to discriminate among suitable partners. Additionally, we present a model that shows that partner choice signaling increases symbiont and host fitness in the absence of sanctions. Finally, we call for a renewed focus on elucidating the signaling mechanisms that are critical to partner choice while further aiming to understand their evolutionary dynamics in nature.
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