Open Access
Open access
Metabolites, volume 11, issue 6, pages 369

Plant Transcriptome Reprograming and Bacterial Extracellular Metabolites Underlying Tomato Drought Resistance Triggered by a Beneficial Soil Bacteria

Juan Vílchez 1
Song Zhang 1
Richa Kaushal 1
Danxia He 1
Hailing Zi 1
RENYI LIU 1
Karsten Niehaus 3
Avtar K. Handa 4
Huiming Zhang 1
Show full list: 10 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-06-09
Journal: Metabolites
scimago Q2
SJR0.903
CiteScore5.7
Impact factor3.4
ISSN22181989
Biochemistry
Molecular Biology
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Abstract

Water deficit is one of the major constraints to crop production and food security worldwide. Some plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) strains are capable of increasing plant drought resistance. Knowledge about the mechanisms underlying bacteria-induced plant drought resistance is important for PGPR applications in agriculture. In this study, we show the drought stress-mitigating effects on tomato plants by the Bacillus megaterium strain TG1-E1, followed by the profiling of plant transcriptomic responses to TG1-E1 and the profiling of bacterial extracellular metabolites. Comparison between the transcriptomes of drought-stressed plants with and without TG1-E1 inoculation revealed bacteria-induced transcriptome reprograming, with highlights on differentially expressed genes belonging to the functional categories including transcription factors, signal transduction, and cell wall biogenesis and organization. Mass spectrometry-based analysis identified over 40 bacterial extracellular metabolites, including several important regulators or osmoprotectant precursors for increasing plant drought resistance. These results demonstrate the importance of plant transcriptional regulation and bacterial metabolites in PGPR-induced plant drought resistance.

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