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Biotic stress-induced changes in root exudation confer plant stress tolerance by altering rhizospheric microbial community

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1132824

Keywords

biotic factors; rhizospheric microbial community; root exudates; stress tolerance; plant microbiome

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Every organism interacts with its neighbors, and this includes plants with their surrounding microbes and neighboring plants. Plant root exudates play a crucial role as chemical signals in these interactions, influencing the composition of the rhizospheric microbial community. Biotic factors such as herbivores, microbes, and neighboring plants can alter the composition of root exudates, leading to either positive or negative interactions in the rhizosphere. Understanding these interactions can help engineer plant microbiomes to enhance plant adaptive capabilities in stressful environments.
Every organism on the earth maintains some kind of interaction with its neighbours. As plants are sessile, they sense the varied above-ground and below-ground environmental stimuli and decipher these dialogues to the below-ground microbes and neighbouring plants via root exudates as chemical signals resulting in the modulation of the rhizospheric microbial community. The composition of root exudates depends upon the host genotype, environmental cues, and interaction of plants with other biotic factors. Crosstalk of plants with biotic agents such as herbivores, microbes, and neighbouring plants can change host plant root exudate composition, which may permit either positive or negative interactions to generate a battlefield in the rhizosphere. Compatible microbes utilize the plant carbon sources as their organic nutrients and show robust co-evolutionary changes in changing circumstances. In this review, we have mainly focused on the different biotic factors responsible for the synthesis of alternative root exudate composition leading to the modulation of rhizosphere microbiota. Understanding the stress-induced root exudate composition and resulting change in microbial community can help us to devise strategies in engineering plant microbiomes to enhance plant adaptive capabilities in a stressful environment.

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