PLoS Biology (Mar 2017)

Research priorities for harnessing plant microbiomes in sustainable agriculture.

  • Posy E Busby,
  • Chinmay Soman,
  • Maggie R Wagner,
  • Maren L Friesen,
  • James Kremer,
  • Alison Bennett,
  • Mustafa Morsy,
  • Jonathan A Eisen,
  • Jan E Leach,
  • Jeffery L Dangl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2001793
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3
p. e2001793

Abstract

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Feeding a growing world population amidst climate change requires optimizing the reliability, resource use, and environmental impacts of food production. One way to assist in achieving these goals is to integrate beneficial plant microbiomes-i.e., those enhancing plant growth, nutrient use efficiency, abiotic stress tolerance, and disease resistance-into agricultural production. This integration will require a large-scale effort among academic researchers, industry researchers, and farmers to understand and manage plant-microbiome interactions in the context of modern agricultural systems. Here, we identify priorities for research in this area: (1) develop model host-microbiome systems for crop plants and non-crop plants with associated microbial culture collections and reference genomes, (2) define core microbiomes and metagenomes in these model systems, (3) elucidate the rules of synthetic, functionally programmable microbiome assembly, (4) determine functional mechanisms of plant-microbiome interactions, and (5) characterize and refine plant genotype-by-environment-by-microbiome-by-management interactions. Meeting these goals should accelerate our ability to design and implement effective agricultural microbiome manipulations and management strategies, which, in turn, will pay dividends for both the consumers and producers of the world food supply.