作者
Asaf Levy,Isaí Salas González,Maximilian Mittelviefhaus,Scott Clingenpeel,Sur Herrera Paredes,Jiamin Miao,Kunru Wang,Giulia Devescovi,Kyra Stillman,Freddy Monteiro,Bryan Rangel Alvarez,Derek S. Lundberg,Tse-Yuan S. Lu,Sarah L. Lebeis,Zhao Jin,Meredith McDonald,Andrew P. Klein,Meghan E. Feltcher,Tijana Glavina Rio,Sarah R. Grant,Sharon Doty,Ruth E. Ley,Bingyu Zhao,Vittorio Venturi,Dale A. Pelletier,Julia A. Vorholt,Susannah G. Tringe,Tanja Woyke,Jeffery L. Dangl
摘要
Plants intimately associate with diverse bacteria. Plant-associated bacteria have ostensibly evolved genes that enable them to adapt to plant environments. However, the identities of such genes are mostly unknown, and their functions are poorly characterized. We sequenced 484 genomes of bacterial isolates from roots of Brassicaceae, poplar, and maize. We then compared 3,837 bacterial genomes to identify thousands of plant-associated gene clusters. Genomes of plant-associated bacteria encode more carbohydrate metabolism functions and fewer mobile elements than related non-plant-associated genomes do. We experimentally validated candidates from two sets of plant-associated genes: one involved in plant colonization, and the other serving in microbe–microbe competition between plant-associated bacteria. We also identified 64 plant-associated protein domains that potentially mimic plant domains; some are shared with plant-associated fungi and oomycetes. This work expands the genome-based understanding of plant–microbe interactions and provides potential leads for efficient and sustainable agriculture through microbiome engineering. Comparative genomic analysis of 3,837 bacterial genomes, including new sequences from 484 root-associated isolates, identifies plant-associated gene clusters and plant-mimicking domains.