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Root-Secreted Coumarins and the Microbiota Interact to Improve Iron Nutrition in Arabidopsis.

Cell host & microbe (2020-10-08)
Christopher J Harbort, Masayoshi Hashimoto, Haruhiko Inoue, Yulong Niu, Rui Guan, Adamo D Rombolà, Stanislav Kopriva, Mathias J E E E Voges, Elizabeth S Sattely, Ruben Garrido-Oter, Paul Schulze-Lefert
RESUMEN

Plants benefit from associations with a diverse community of root-colonizing microbes. Deciphering the mechanisms underpinning these beneficial services are of interest for improving plant productivity. We report a plant-beneficial interaction between Arabidopsis thaliana and the root microbiota under iron deprivation that is dependent on the secretion of plant-derived coumarins. Disrupting this pathway alters the microbiota and impairs plant growth in iron-limiting soil. Furthermore, the microbiota improves iron-limiting plant performance via a mechanism dependent on plant iron import and secretion of the coumarin fraxetin. This beneficial trait is strain specific yet functionally redundant across phylogenetic lineages of the microbiota. Transcriptomic and elemental analyses revealed that this interaction between commensals and coumarins promotes growth by relieving iron starvation. These results show that coumarins improve plant performance by eliciting microbe-assisted iron nutrition. We propose that the bacterial root microbiota, stimulated by secreted coumarins, is an integral mediator of plant adaptation to iron-limiting soils.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid ferric sodium salt, BioReagent, suitable for plant cell culture, crystalline
BRAND® 96-well microplate, U-bottom, round bottom, non-sterile
Sigma-Aldrich
Scopoletin, ≥99%
Scopolin, phyproof® Reference Substance