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The mechanisms of plant-associated microbes in regulating plant drought adaptation

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  • 1Mountain Ecological Restoration and Biodiversity Conservation Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province & Maoxian Mountain Ecosystem Research Station, Chengdu Institute of Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu 610213, China,
    2University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China

    *Corresponding author. E-mail: yincy@cib.ac.cn

Received date: 2024-12-15

  Accepted date: 2025-04-02

  Online published: 2025-04-21

Supported by

This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 32071500), the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences (No. XDA26010102) and the Science and Technology Projects of China Renewable Energy Engineering Institute (CREEI) (No. ZS-KJHB-20220014).

Abstract

Drought represents a paramount abiotic stressor constraining global agroforestry productivity. Plants have evolved multifaceted adaptive strategies involving active modulation of symbiotic microbial communities to mitigate drought stress. These plant-associated microbes enhance plant drought adaptation via five principal mechanisms: (i) extracellular polymeric substance-mediated biofilm formation on plant surface enhances hydroregulation and edaphic structural stability; (ii) osmoprotectant biosynthesis (e.g., proline) maintains cellular osmotic equilibrium; (iii) synthesizing antioxidants to reduce damage from reactive oxygen species and oxidative stress; (iv) regulating plant phytohormone metabolism by secreting hormones (e.g. indole-3-acetic acid) and 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic deaminase; (v) emitting signaling molecules (e.g. volatile organic compounds, hormones and enzymes) to activate plant drought adaptation. Future researches should focus on the development of host-specific drought-adaptive microbial consortia while elucidating phyllosphere–rhizosphere microbiome crosstalk, ultimately harnessing translational microbiome engineering to evaluate their efficacy in multi-environment agricultural systems.

Cite this article

Chaoqun Chen, Juan Zhan, Wenzhi Du, Shulan Wu, Liu Li, Chunying Yin . The mechanisms of plant-associated microbes in regulating plant drought adaptation[J]. Journal of Plant Ecology, 2025 , 18(4) : 1 -25 . DOI: 10.1093/jpe/rtaf047

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