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identifier PRJEB20127
type bioproject
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title Hu et al. 2018; Root exudate metabolites drive plant-soil feedbacks on growth and defense by shaping the rhizosphere microbiota
description By changing soil properties, plants can modify their growth environment. Although the soil microbiota is known to play a key role in the resulting plant-soil feedbacks, the proximal mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain unknown. We found that benzoxazinoids, a class of defensive secondary metabolites that are released by roots of cereals such as wheat and maize, alter root-associated fungal and bacterial communities, decrease plant growth, increase jasmonate signaling and plant defenses and suppress herbivore performance in the next plant generation. Complementation experiments demonstrate that the benzoxazinoid breakdown product 6-methoxy-benzoxazolin-2-one (MBOA), which accumulates in the soil during the conditioning phase, is both sufficient and necessary to trigger the observed phenotypic changes. Sterilization, fungal and bacterial profiling and complementation experiments reveal that MBOA acts indirectly by altering root-associated microbiota. Our results reveal a mechanism by which plants determine the composition of rhizosphere microbiota, plant performance and plant-herbivore interactions of the next generation.
data type Other
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{...}
dbXrefs
sra-run  ERR1897927ERR2603028
sra-submission  ERA861321ERA1502189
biosample  SAMEA103939171SAMEA4698767
sra-study  ERP022250
sra-sample  ERS1628339ERS2518939
sra-experiment  ERX1958317ERX2619684
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status public
visibility unrestricted-access
dateCreated 2018-06-07T00:00:00Z
dateModified 2018-06-07T00:00:00Z
datePublished