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Native soils with their microbiotas elicit a state of alert in tomato plants

Authors :
Davide Spadaro
Marco Chiapello
Mara Novero
Matteo Chialva
Paolo Bagnaresi
Alessandra Salvioli di Fossalunga
Stefania Daghino
Silvia Perotto
Paola Bonfante
Stefano Ghignone
Source :
New phytologist, 220 (2018): 1296–1308. doi:10.1111/nph.15014, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Chialva M., Salvioli di Fossalunga A., Daghino S., Ghignone S., Bagnaresi P., Chiapello M., Novero M., Spadaro D., Perotto S., Bonfante P./titolo:Native soils with their microbiotas elicit a state of alert in tomato plants/doi:10.1111%2Fnph.15014/rivista:New phytologist (Print)/anno:2018/pagina_da:1296/pagina_a:1308/intervallo_pagine:1296–1308/volume:220, New Phytologist
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Several studies have investigated soil microbial biodiversity, but understanding of the mechanisms underlying plant responses to soil microbiota remains in its infancy. Here, we focused on tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), testing the hypothesis that plants grown on native soils display different responses to soil microbiotas. Using transcriptomics, proteomics, and biochemistry, we describe the responses of two tomato genotypes (susceptible or resistant toFusarium oxysporumf. sp.lycopersici) grown on an artificial growth substrate and two native soils (conducive and suppressive toFusarium). Native soils affected tomato responses by modulating pathways involved in responses to oxidative stress, phenol biosynthesis, lignin deposition, and innate immunity, particularly in the suppressive soil. In tomato plants grown on steam‐disinfected soils, total phenols and lignin decreased significantly. The inoculation of a mycorrhizal fungus partly rescued this response locally and systemically. Plants inoculated with the fungal pathogen showed reduced disease symptoms in the resistant genotype in both soils, but the susceptible genotype was partially protected from the pathogen only when grown on the suppressive soil. The ‘state of alert’ detected in tomatoes reveals novel mechanisms operating in plants in native soils and the soil microbiota appears to be one of the drivers of these plant responses.

Details

ISSN :
14698137
Volume :
220
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The New phytologist
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2bbf829fe0867525f17955b6eb00b50b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.15014