Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Kiely, PD;Haynes, JM;Higgins, CH;Franks, A;Mark, GL;Morrissey, JP;O'Gara, F
2006
April
Microbial Ecology
Exploiting new systems-based strategies to elucidate plant-bacterial interactions in the rhizosphere
Validated
WOS: 47 ()
Optional Fields
GREEN FLUORESCENT PROTEIN COMPLETE GENOME SEQUENCE ALFALFA MEDICAGO-SATIVA PSEUDOMONAS-FLUORESCENS FUNCTIONAL GENOMICS TRANSCRIPTIONAL REPRESSOR SINORHIZOBIUM-MELILOTI QUANTITATIVE-ANALYSIS ARABIDOPSIS-THALIANA PROTEOMIC ANALYSIS
51
257
266
The rhizosphere is the site of intense interactions between plant, bacterial, and fungal partners. In plant-bacterial interactions, signal molecules exuded by the plant affect both primary initiation and subsequent behavior of the bacteria in complex beneficial associations such as biocontrol. However, despite this general acceptance that plant-root exudates have an effect on the resident bacterial populations, very little is still known about the influence of these signals on bacterial gene expression and the roles of genes found to have altered expression in plant-microbial interactions. Analysis of the rhizospheric communities incorporating both established techniques, and recently developed "omic technologies" can now facilitate investigations into the molecular basis underpinning the establishment of beneficial plant-microbial interactomes in the rhizosphere. The understanding of these signaling processes, and the functions they regulate, is fundamental to understanding the basis of beneficial microbial-plant interactions, to overcoming existing limitations, and to designing improved strategies for the development of novel Pseudomonas biocontrol strains.
NEW YORK
0095-3628
10.1007/s00248-006-9019-y
Grant Details