Plants Found To Use Genes To Recruit Microbial Cavalry
Article originally published in April, 1997
MADISON - In the battle against the legions of lethal soil pathogens
that beset crops, plants, apparently, have the ability to summon the microbial
cavalry.
Scientists have long known that beneficial soil microorganisms tend
to flock to plant roots -- along with their detrimental bacterial and fungal
counterparts. But they've never known how.
Now scientists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, writing in
the current issue (April 27, 1997) of the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences (PNAS), report that the ability to call for help is genetically
wired into plants. The finding chips away at a fundamental mystery of symbiotic
behavior and suggests that through careful breeding, the battle against
devastating soil microbes can be turned.
"We now have genetic evidence that plants contribute significantly"
to the activity of beneficial soil microorganisms, said Robert M. Goodman,
a UW-Madison professor of plant pathology and a co-author of the PNAS paper.
"Genes somehow play a role in terms of what kinds of microbes are
recruited."
The work suggests that the tools are now available to breed plants
that are good hosts for beneficial microorganisms.
Soil is host to a zoo of microorganisms, some good and some bad. Soil
pathogens -- bacteria, fungi and other microbes -- infect nearly all cultivated
plants, reducing yields and in some instances wiping out entire crops.
The most tragic example is the Irish potato famine of the mid-19th century
when a Phytophthora fungus rotted the staple food of Irish life, leading
to mass starvation and migration.
More recently, chemical pesticides have been used to successfully control
such blights. But microbes may develop resistance to the chemical agents,
which also pose the threat of pollution to ground water and soil. By finding
that plants themselves have the ability to recruit microbes that combat
other disease-causing organisms, Wisconsin scientists have opened a new
front in a battle that is as old as agriculture.
"This work is a start," said Goodman. "It is an experimental
tool to tease out the genetics" that could enable plant breeders to
create strains of plants that act as magnets not only for diseases-fighting
microbes, but also for other beneficial microorganisms such as nitrogen-fixing
bacteria.
The problem of how microbes of all kinds are drawn to the roots of
plants is an old one, said Goodman, but most work has focused on the role
of the microbe. "What we are no longer ignoring is the contribution
of the plant to these associations," he said.
The discovery was made using an experimental population of plants derived
from a cross between a cultivated tomato and a related wild species to
create plants with varying genetic abilities. Those plants were then exposed
to a pathogen that causes seed and seedling diseases, and then to a disease-suppressing
bacterium known as UW85, a soil microbe discovered in 1985 by UW-Madison
plant pathologist Jo Handelsman.The Wisconsin team observed that the combined
effects of several tomato genes contributed to the ability of plants to
support populations of the disease-thwarting UW85 bacterium.
The catch, said Goodman, is that while the team was able to demonstrate
the influence of genes and roughly locate where those genes lie on tomato
chromosomes, more work is needed to precisely identify the genes involved
and find out exactly what they do to help attract good microbes.
"Each (tomato) line had a characteristic level of biocontrol,"
said Goodman, "although we don't yet know what these genes are."
But what the work does do is firmly establish that plants play a role
in beneficial interactions with one bacterium, and it points to the appealing
idea that plants may have active ways of attracting different kinds of
soil microbes to the critical root environment. It is likely, Goodman explained,
that there are a number of genes at work and that they initiate a chain
of biochemical communication that somehow signals microbes and draws them
to the plants. Other factors, such as the physical features of plant roots,
probably play a role as well, he added.
Goodman and co-authors Kevin P. Smith, now on the faculty at the University
of Minnesota, and Jo Handelsman, a UW-Madison professor of plant pathology,
are now extending the research to corn. The critical crop plant, cultivated
on more than 80 million acres in the midwestern United States, has fairly
well-known genes, but it requires significant amounts of chemical fungicide
to survive.
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-- Terry Devitt (608) 262-8282,
trdevitt@facstaff.wisc.edu
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