Journal
BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS
Volume 47, Issue 7, Pages 729-743Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00374-011-0605-x
Keywords
PGPR; Rhizosphere competence; Transcriptome; Process-centric approach
Categories
Funding
- Science Foundation of Ireland [07/IN.1/B948, 08/RFP/GEN1295, 08/RFP/GEN1319, SFI09/RFP/BMT2350]
- Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food [06-321, 06-377, 06RDC459 06RDC506, 08RDC629]
- European Commission [MTKD-CT2006-042062, EU256596]
- IRCSET [05/EDIV/FP107/INTERPAM]
- Marine Institute [CCRA 2007/082]
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) [2006-PhD-S-21, 2008-PhD-S-2]
- HRB [RP/2006/271, RP/2007/290, HRA/2009/146]
- BIOMERIT Research Centre
- Health Research Board (HRB) [HRA-2009-146] Funding Source: Health Research Board (HRB)
- Environmental Protection Agency Ireland (EPA) [2006-PhD-S-21] Funding Source: Environmental Protection Agency Ireland (EPA)
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In soil, some specific bacterial populations, called plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria are able to promote plant growth and/or reduce the incidence of soil-borne diseases. Rhizosphere competence is an important prerequisite for the efficacy of these biocontrol strains. Therefore, over decades, multiple approaches have been combined to understand the molecular basis of bacterial traits involved in rhizosphere competence. This review addresses the bacterial genes expressed during bacterial-plant interactions in the rhizosphere of different plant species. The distribution of these key genes in natural populations of rhizobacteria is also discussed.
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