Plant growth-promoting
Streptomyces
assemble into the internal, root endophytic compartments of a wide variety of plants around the world. These bacteria are well-known for their ability to produce a huge array of secondary metabolites and also protect against pests.
Recent research published in
Phytobiomes Journal
demonstrates that melanin-producing
Streptomyces
are more likely to colonize plants, which has been shown to be protective for many different organisms.
According to corresponding author Sarah Lebeis, “We show that the ability to produce melanin protects microbes from harmful chemicals they encounter when they live inside of a plant and that it is active when bacteria are inside plants. We believe that our findings provide a protective pathway potentially utilized by a variety of other microbes when they try to grow inside of plants.”
Lebeis and her fellow researchers at the University of Tennessee had access to an extensive collection of
Streptomyces
isolates from
Arabidopsis thaliana
roots grown in two soils in North Carolina. Upon analysis, they came up with the hypotheses that
Streptomyces
that produces melanin colonizes plants better. They tested this hypothesis using strains from another collection isolated from Poplar trees mostly on the West Coast but also from Appalachia and found similar results.
“This makes us think that this mechanism is more generalizable between plant-microbe interactions,” Lebeis explained. “The soils are very different between the collections, and the potential time required for the association could be very different (6 weeks for
Arabidopsis
, and potentially years for the Poplar). This make us think that the protection being able to make melanin provides is in response to a strong selective pressure from the plant.”
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For more information about this research, which links biochemistry and genomics with the plant-microbe interaction field, read ”
Root-Associated
Streptomyces
Isolates Harboring melC Genes Demonstrate Enhanced Plant Colonization
” published in the September issue of
Phytobiomes Journal
.
This part of information is sourced from https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-11/aps-msa112019.php
Ashley Bergman Carlin
651-994-3832
acarlin@scisoc.org
http://www.apsnet.org