About this Research Topic
Responding to the latest developments in genomics, metabolomics and proteomics techniques, the topic of plant-microbe interactions is attracting extensive interest from a diverse array of researchers including microbial ecologists, plant molecular biologists, plant pathologists, breeders, etc. These studies have highlighted the importance of plant species and genotype in exerting distinctive selective pressures on the microbial community and the assembly of the rhizosphere and phyllosphere microbiomes, which can impact plant gene expression.
In view of this intense activity, this Research Topic aims to compile papers presenting new concepts and latest findings on microbiomes and metabolic responses in plant-microbe interactions and consequences to plant’s immunity and health.
The scope of this Research Topic is to broadly cover phenotypic and functional diversity of microbiota in the rhizosphere and phyllosphere, and microbe interactions with plants using multi-omics techniques.
Areas to cover may include:
• Functional microbiomes in the rhizosphere and within roots influencing disease suppression and plant health
• Plant immune responses to phytobiome – metabolomics, phenotypic and functional microbiome diversity
• Host genetics-based selection of microbial community – genomic interactions
• Phyllosphere microbiome – metabolites, microbial diversity and molecular mechanisms to immune responses, stress tolerance and plant health
• Management and environmental influences on phytobiome composition and metabolic consequences
• Microbe priming of plant immunity – long distance signaling revealed by multi-omics
• Microbiome influences on plant root architecture and consequences to plant resilience to stresses
A list of accepted article types including descriptions can be found at this link.
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.