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Science paper links root endodermis and microbiota in mineral balance

Valéria Custódio, ITQB NOVA researcher and GREEN-IT member, is co-author of the paper, which offers new insight on the importance of the relationship between microbiota and root endodermis.

In a similar way to animal guts and the intestinal epithelium, plant roots are in charge of absorbing nutrients and water and of its subsequent transport to the vascular systems. It is carefully monitored by the endodermis, the innermost layer of the cortex, and its diffusion barriers, whose main role is to maintain mineral nutrient homeostasis. But unlike animals, in which the relationship between the epithelium and the microbiota has been somewhat decoded, in plants, the way the root diffusion barriers harmonizes with the resident microbiota is still to be fully comprehended.

In paper published in the last edition of Science, a team composed by researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the University of Nottingham, ITQB NOVA, Université Sine-Saloum El Hadj Ibrahima NIASSE and the University of Bonn have shown that, in the common model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, the genes that regulate the endodermal root diffusion barrier influence the configuration of the plant microbiome, and that likewise the microbiomes that colonize the root also influence the function of the root diffusion barrier, transforming the endodermis into a regulatory hub. “It is this tight arrangement between root diffusion barriers and the microbiome that allows to keep the balance of mineral nutrients of plants and provides them a way to cope with fluctuations in mineral nutrient supplies”, explains co-author Valeria Custódio, ITQB NOVA PhD student affiliated with the GREEN-IT research unit.

This study not only shows a generalized role of microbiome in controlling diffusion barrier functions across kingdoms, but also indicates that this coordination may influence plant performance in a fluctuating environment with consequences on agriculture and food quality, possibly contributing for the future development of plants better adapted to extreme environmental conditions.

Valéria Custódio was supported by FCT PhD fellowship SFRH/BD/128384/2017 and GREEN-IT research Unit (UIDB and UIDP 04551/2020) at the beginning of this study.

 

Original paper:

 

Science | 10.1126/science.abd0695

Coordination between microbiota and root endodermis supports plant mineral nutrient homeostasis

Isai Salas-González, Guilhem Reyt, Paulina Flis, Valéria Custódio, David Gopaulchan, Niokhor Bakhoum, Tristan P. Dew, Kiran Suresh, Rochus Benni Franke, Jeffery L. Dangl, David E. Salt, Gabriel Castrillo.