958 results match your criteria: "a Division of Plant Microbe Interactions; CSIR-National Botanical Research Institute[Affiliation]"
ISME J
January 2024
School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, College of the Environment, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195-2100, United States.
Appl Environ Microbiol
March 2024
Department of Microbiology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA.
Unlabelled: Phyllosphere microbial communities are increasingly experiencing intense pulse disturbance events such as drought. It is currently unknown how phyllosphere communities respond to such disturbances and if they are able to recover. We explored the stability of phyllosphere communities over time, in response to drought stress, and under recovery from drought on temperate forage grasses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Microbiol
February 2024
Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA.
microbeMASST, a taxonomically informed mass spectrometry (MS) search tool, tackles limited microbial metabolite annotation in untargeted metabolomics experiments. Leveraging a curated database of >60,000 microbial monocultures, users can search known and unknown MS/MS spectra and link them to their respective microbial producers via MS/MS fragmentation patterns. Identification of microbe-derived metabolites and relative producers without a priori knowledge will vastly enhance the understanding of microorganisms' role in ecology and human health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Microbiol
February 2024
Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Science, Kasetsart University, Chatuchak, Bangkok, 10900, Thailand.
Duckweed-associated actinobacteria are co-existing microbes that affect duckweed growth and adaptation. In this study, we aimed to report a novel actinobacterium species and explore its ability to enhance duckweed growth. Strain DW7H6 was isolated from duckweed, Lemna aequinoctialis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Rep
February 2024
Division of Microbiology, ICAR-Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi, 110012, India.
Background: The gut microbiome of honey bees significantly influences vital traits and metabolic processes, including digestion, detoxification, nutrient provision, development, and immunity. However, there is a limited information is available on the gut bacterial diversity of western honey bee populations in India. This study addresses the critical knowledge gap and outcome of which would benefit the beekeepers in India.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlanta
January 2024
Centro de Ciencias Genómicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.
The biostimulant Hanseniaspora opuntiae regulates Arabidopsis thaliana root development and resistance to Botrytis cinerea. Beneficial microbes can increase plant nutrient accessibility and uptake, promote abiotic stress tolerance, and enhance disease resistance, while pathogenic microorganisms cause plant disease, affecting cellular homeostasis and leading to cell death in the most critical cases. Commonly, plants use specialized pattern recognition receptors to perceive beneficial or pathogen microorganisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
January 2024
Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA.
Potassium (K) is an essential nutrient for plant growth, and despite its abundance in soil, most of the K is structurally bound in minerals, limiting its bioavailability and making this soil K reservoir largely inaccessible to plants. Microbial biochemical weathering has been shown to be a promising pathway to sustainably increase plant available K. However, the mechanisms underpinning microbial K uptake, transformation, storage, and sharing are poorly resolved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiome
January 2024
Plant-Microbe Interactions, Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Utrecht University, Padualaan 8, 3584 CH, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Background: Plant microbiomes play crucial roles in nutrient cycling and plant growth, and are shaped by a complex interplay between plants, microbes, and the environment. The role of bacteria as mediators of the 400-million-year-old partnership between the majority of land plants and, arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi is still poorly understood. Here, we test whether AM hyphae-associated bacteria influence the success of the AM symbiosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPersoonia
December 2022
Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute, Uppsalalaan 8, 3584 CT Utrecht, The Netherlands.
3 Biotech
February 2024
Division of Microbiology, ICAR-Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI), New Delhi, 110012 India.
Unlabelled: The metabolite profiles of two plant growth promoting cyanobacteria- and , which serve as promising biofertilizers, and biocontrol agents were generated to investigate their agriculturally beneficial activities. Preliminary biochemical analyses, in terms of total chlorophyll, total proteins, and IAA were highest at 14 days after inoculation (DAI). In 20-25% higher values of reducing sugars, than at both 14 and 21 DAI were recorded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Plant Microbe Interact
March 2024
Division of Plant Sciences, School of Life Sciences, University of Dundee, Dundee, DD1 5EH, U.K.
Similar to plant pathogens, phloem-feeding insects such as aphids deliver effector proteins inside their hosts that act to promote host susceptibility and enable feeding and infestation. Despite exciting progress toward identifying and characterizing effector proteins from these insects, their functions remain largely unknown. The recent groundbreaking development in protein structure prediction algorithms, combined with the availability of proteomics and transcriptomic datasets for agriculturally important pests, provides new opportunities to explore the structural and functional diversity of effector repertoires.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Res
March 2024
Department of Biotechnology, Saveetha School of Engineering, Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences (SIMATS), Thandalam, Chennai, 602105, Tamil Nadu, India. Electronic address:
Enhancing crop yield to accommodate the ever-increasing world population has become critical, and diminishing arable land has pressured current agricultural practices. Intensive farming methods have been using more pesticides and insecticides (biocides), culminating in soil deposition, negatively impacting the microbiome. Hence, a deeper understanding of the interaction and impact of pesticides and insecticides on microbial communities is required for the scientific community.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Plant Microbe Interact
March 2024
Division of Plant Sciences, School of Life Sciences, University of Dundee, Dundee, DD2 5DA, U.K.
Phloem-feeding insects include many important agricultural pests that cause crop damage globally, either through feeding-related damage or upon transmission of viruses and microbes that cause plant diseases. With genetic crop resistances being limited to most of these pests, control relies on insecticides, which are costly and damaging to the environment and to which insects can develop resistance. Like other plant parasites, phloem-feeding insects deliver effectors inside their host plants to promote susceptibility, most likely by a combination of suppressing immunity and promoting nutrient availability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Rep
January 2024
Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA; Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA; Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA. Electronic address:
The critical role of the intestinal microbiota in human health and disease is well recognized. Nevertheless, there are still large gaps in our understanding of the functions and mechanisms encoded in the genomes of most members of the gut microbiota. Genome-scale libraries of transposon mutants are a powerful tool to help us address this gap.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobes Infect
March 2024
Structural Bioinformatics Lab, Biotechnology Division, CSIR-Institute of Himalayan Bioresource Technology, Palampur, 176061, Himachal Pradesh, India; Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research (AcSIR), Ghaziabad, 201002, India. Electronic address:
Tuberculosis is a contagious bacterial ailment that primarily affects the lungs and is brought on by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB). An antimycobacterial medication called bedaquiline (BQ) is specified to treat multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). Despite its contemporary use in clinical practice, the mutations (D32 A/G/N/V/P) constrain the potential of BQ by causing transitions in the structural conformation of the atpE subunit-c after binding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Host Microbe
January 2024
Department of Microbiology and Plant Pathology, Center for Plant Cell Biology, Institute for Integrative Genome Biology, University of California, Riverside, Riverside, CA, USA. Electronic address:
Cross-kingdom small RNA trafficking between hosts and microbes modulates gene expression in the interacting partners during infection. However, whether other RNAs are also transferred is unclear. Here, we discover that host plant Arabidopsis thaliana delivers mRNAs via extracellular vesicles (EVs) into the fungal pathogen Botrytis cinerea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Microbiol
December 2023
Research Unit for Comparative Microbiome Analysis (COMI), Helmholtz Zentrum München, German Research Center for Environmental Health (GmbH), Neuherberg, Germany.
Background: Growing evidence suggests that soil microbes can improve plant fitness under drought. However, in potato, the world's most important non-cereal crop, the role of the rhizosphere microbiome under drought has been poorly studied. Using a cultivation independent metabarcoding approach, we examined the rhizosphere microbiome of two potato cultivars with different drought tolerance as a function of water regime (continuous versus reduced watering) and manipulation of soil microbial diversity (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
November 2023
Division of Plant Breeding and Genetic Resource Conservation, CSIR-Central Institute of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants, Lucknow, India.
The global healthcare market in the post-pandemic era emphasizes a constant pursuit of therapeutic, adaptogenic, and immune booster drugs. Medicinal plants are the only natural resource to meet this by supplying an array of bioactive secondary metabolites in an economic, greener and sustainable manner. Driven by the thrust in demand for natural immunity imparting nutraceutical and life-saving plant-derived drugs, the acreage for commercial cultivation of medicinal plants has dramatically increased in recent years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Direct
November 2023
Biosciences Division Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge Tennessee USA.
Poplar is a short-rotation woody crop frequently studied for its significance as a sustainable bioenergy source. The successful establishment of a poplar plantation partially depends on its rhizosphere-a dynamic zone governed by complex interactions between plant roots and a plethora of commensal, mutualistic, symbiotic, or pathogenic microbes that shape plant fitness. In an exploratory endeavor, we investigated the effects of a consortium consisting of ectomycorrhizal fungi and a beneficial sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Microbiol Rep
February 2024
Plant-Microbe Interactions, Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Soil and plant roots are colonized by highly complex and diverse communities of microbes. It has been proposed that bacteria and fungi have synergistic effects on litter decomposition, but experimental evidence supporting this claim is weak. In this study, we manipulated the composition of two microbial kingdoms (Bacteria and Fungi) in experimental microcosms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
November 2023
Microbiology Department, Biomedical Sciences Institute, University of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo 05508-000, Brazil.
is the causal agent of several plant diseases affecting fruit and nut crops. strain SR1.6/6 was isolated from and shown to promote plant growth by producing phytohormones, providing nutrients, inhibiting , and preventing Citrus Variegated Chlorosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMob DNA
November 2023
Unit of Plant Molecular Cell Biology, Institute for Biology I, RWTH Aachen University, Worringerweg 1, 52056, Aachen, Germany.
Background: The genome of the obligate biotrophic phytopathogenic barley powdery mildew fungus Blumeria hordei is inflated due to highly abundant and possibly active transposable elements (TEs). In the absence of the otherwise common repeat-induced point mutation transposon defense mechanism, noncoding RNAs could be key for regulating the activity of TEs and coding genes during the pathogenic life cycle.
Results: We performed time-course whole-transcriptome shotgun sequencing (RNA-seq) of total RNA derived from infected barley leaf epidermis at various stages of fungal pathogenesis and observed significant transcript accumulation and time point-dependent regulation of TEs in B.
PLoS Comput Biol
November 2023
Biosciences Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, New Mexico, United States of America.
Microbial communities assemble through a complex set of interactions between microbes and their environment, and the resulting metabolic impact on the host ecosystem can be profound. Microbial activity is known to impact human health, plant growth, water quality, and soil carbon storage which has lead to the development of many approaches and products meant to manipulate the microbiome. In order to understand, predict, and improve microbial community engineering, genome-scale modeling techniques have been developed to translate genomic data into inferred microbial dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Bot
January 2024
Division of Plant Sciences, Research School of Biology, College of Science, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 2601Australia.
A growing understanding is emerging of the roles of peptide hormones in local and long-distance signalling that coordinates plant growth and development as well as responses to the environment. C-TERMINALLY ENCODED PEPTIDE (CEP) signalling triggered by its interaction with CEP RECEPTOR 1 (CEPR1) is known to play roles in systemic nitrogen (N) demand signalling, legume nodulation, and root system architecture. Recent research provides further insight into how CEP signalling operates, which involves diverse downstream targets and interactions with other hormone pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
October 2023
Department of Applied Biosciences, Kyungpook National University, Daegu, Republic of Korea.
Phytohormones play vital roles in stress modulation and enhancing the growth of plants. They interact with one another to produce programmed signaling responses by regulating gene expression. Environmental stress, including drought stress, hampers food and energy security.
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