About this Research Topic
Plants host diverse microbial communities associated to the rhizosphere, phyllosphere and endosphere. Every plant species is characterized by specific microbiomes whose composition is influenced by several factors, including plant age, developmental stage, species or cultivar, and health state. In addition, a multitude of biotic and abiotic factors modulate the structural and functional diversity of the plant-associated microbiome, including soil properties, nutrient status, pollution, stresses and climatic conditions. Experimental evidences that led to the identification of plant species and varieties that are promising tools in the remediation of polluted environments, also highlighted the importance of the plant microbiome in this process. It is now clear that the plant host can control the composition of its microbiome, establishing an association with microbes that directly benefits plant growth and health and favors decontamination and stress tolerance. Recent Omics approaches -including metagenomics, metatranscriptomics and metaproteomics, which allow the assessment and comparison of microbiome populations and communities, have shed light on the molecular basis of pollutant accumulation and stress tolerance in plants. Moreover, they also allowed to investigate how the interactions between plants and microbes can be modified to maximize plants phytoremediation capacity and tolerance to contaminants.
In this Research Topic we welcome manuscripts focused on plant-microbe interaction, in general, and on the dynamics of the microbial communities in response to soil contamination, as well as on genetic, biochemical and physiological characterizations of microbes useful for phytoremediation purposes and of the stress response of the plant-microbe interaction. In particular, we aim to collect manuscripts on the following subjects:
• The diversity of plant-associated microorganisms with contaminant detoxifying abilities in the rhizosphere/endosphere
• Biological models to elucidate the driving and competitive forces that lead to the establishment of a rhizosphere/endosphere microbiome with phytoremediation capacities
• Selection of plants for their broader interaction with the microbiome and harnessing the nutritional and signaling events between plant and microorganisms
• Molecular identification of genes, pathways, metabolites involved in stress responses and tolerance mechanism of host-microbe systems
• Phyto- and bio-remediation in microbial-assisted field trials
Keywords: Phytoremediation, Bioremediation, Plant-Microbiome Interactions, Omics of Plant Stress Tolerance, Omics of Host-Microbe Interaction
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.