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Home › Publications › Plant myo-inositol transport influences bacterial colonization phenotypes

Plant myo-inositol transport influences bacterial colonization phenotypes

Published in:

Current Biology 33(15) , 3111-3124.e5 ( 2023)

Author(s):

O'Banion, Bridget S, Jones, Piet, Demetros, Alexander A, Kelley, Brittni R, Knoor, Leah H, Wagner, Andrew S, Chen, Jin-Gui, Muchero, Wellington, Reynolds, Todd B, Jacobson, Daniel, Lebeis, Sarah L

DOI:

10.1016/j.cub.2023.06.057

Abstract:

Plant microbiomes are assembled and modified through a complex milieu of biotic and abiotic factors. Despite dynamic and fluctuating contributing variables, specific host metabolites are consistently identified as important mediators of microbial interactions. We combine information from a large-scale metatranscriptomic dataset from natural poplar trees and experimental genetic manipulation assays in seedlings of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana to converge on a conserved role for transport of the plant metabolite myo-inositol in mediating host-microbe interactions. While microbial catabolism of this compound has been linked to increased host colonization, we identify bacterial phenotypes that occur in both catabolism-dependent and -independent manners, suggesting that myo-inositol may additionally serve as a eukaryotic-derived signaling molecule to modulate microbial activities. Our data suggest host control of this compound and resulting microbial behavior are important mechanisms at play surrounding the host metabolite myo-inositol.

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