About this Research Topic
For many years researchers in different fields have studied plant genetics, agricultural microbiology, and metagenomics. The recent evidence for the interaction between these factors is driving towards interdisciplinary approaches that study how the plant genome influences the recruitment of the microbiome and how the introduction of beneficial or pathogenic symbiotic microorganisms interferes with this process.
Studies that dissect the relevance of plant genome in its interaction with the microorganisms around it, how the microbiota can be harnessed for the benefit of agriculture and the environment, and how microbial inoculums can be best employed for sustainable agricultural production will be essential to achieve the goals of food security, food safety, and sustainability of production that agriculture is currently facing.
We invite authors to submit original research or review manuscripts on the following themes:
• Characterizing the genetic elements that underlie microbiome recruitment and composition, and their effect on agronomically-relevant traits and/or stress resistance;
• Comparing microbiome composition and function across related plant species and varieties, and their link to agronomical traits;
• Comparing the effects of microbial inoculants, such as plant-growth promoters or biocontrol agents, in different plant hosts;
• Determining the interaction between pathogens or microbial inoculants and the plant-associated microbiome;
• Describing spatial and temporal development of plant microbiome, in relation with plant host genetic elements and/or gene expression patterns;
• Characterizing genetic and metagenomic drivers in determining the outcome of plant-microbe interaction, with a particular focus on interaction with pathogenic or beneficial symbiotic microbes.
Keywords: microbial inoculums, plant genome, plant interactions, plant holobiont, plant symbiotic interactions, plant pathogen interaction, plant microbe
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.