Frontiers in Plant Science (Aug 2023)

Rhizobacterial mediated interactions in Curcuma longa for plant growth and enhanced crop productivity: a systematic review

  • Sonam Khan,
  • Ambika,
  • Komal Rani,
  • Sushant Sharma,
  • Abhishek Kumar,
  • Seema Singh,
  • Madhu Thapliyal,
  • Pramod Rawat,
  • Ajay Thakur,
  • Shailesh Pandey,
  • Ashish Thapliyal,
  • Manoj Pal,
  • Yashaswi Singh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2023.1231676
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Turmeric (Curcuma longa L.), a significant commercial crop of the Indian subcontinent is widely used as a condiment, natural dye, and as a cure for different ailments. Various bioactive compounds such as turmerones and curcuminoids have been isolated from C. longa that have shown remarkable medicinal activity against various ailments. However, reduced soil fertility, climatic variations, rapid urbanization, and enhanced food demand, pose a multifaceted challenge to the current agricultural practices of C. longa. Plant growth-promoting microbes play a vital role in plant growth and development by regulating primary and secondary metabolite production. Rhizospheric associations are complex species-specific interconnections of different microbiota with a plant that sustain soil health and promote plant growth through nutrient acquisition, nitrogen fixation, phosphate availability, phytohormone production, and antimicrobial activities. An elaborative study of microbiota associated with the roots of C. longa is essential for rhizospheric engineering as there is a huge potential to develop novel products based on microbial consortium formulations and elicitors to improve plant health, stress tolerance, and the production of secondary metabolites such as curcumin. Primarily, the purpose of this review is to implicate the rhizospheric microbial flora as probiotics influencing overall C. longa health, development, and survival for an increase in biomass, enhanced yield of secondary metabolites, and sustainable crop production.

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