Genome Editing in Bacteria (Part 2)

Genome Editing of Plant Growth-Promoting Microbes (PGPM) Towards Developing Smart Bio-Formulations for Sustainable Agriculture: Current Trends and Perspectives

Author(s): Sugitha Thankappan*, Asish K. Binodh, P. Ramesh Kumar, Sajan Kurien, Shobana Narayanasamy, Jeberlin. B. Prabina and Sivakumar Uthandi

Pp: 106-149 (44)

DOI: 10.2174/9789815223798124010006

* (Excluding Mailing and Handling)

Abstract

Plant-associated microbes, referred to as plant microbiomes, are an integral part of the plant system. The multifaceted role of plant microbiota in combating both abiotic and biotic stresses is well documented in different crop species. However, understanding the co-evolution of plant growth- promoting microbes (PGPM) and PGP traits at genetic and molecular levels requires robust molecular tools to unravel the functional gene orthologues involved in plant-microbe interaction. The advent of Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR)/Cas9 (CRISPRassociated protein 9) is of paramount importance in deciphering the plant-microbe interaction and addressing the challenges of unraveling endophytic microbes and their benefits thereof. Our knowledge of plant microbiome composition, signaling cues, secondary metabolites, microbial volatiles, and other driving factors in plant microbiome has been enlightened. In recent years, scientists have focused more on below-ground dialogue in recruiting efficient microbiome/engineered rhizosphere. More recently, base editing techniques using endo-nucleolytic ally deactivated dCas9 protein and sgRNAs (CRISPR interference or CRISPRi) have emerged as a useful approach to study the gene functions and have potential merits in exploring plantmicrobe interactions and the signaling cues involved. A systemic understanding of the signaling events and the respective metabolic pathways will enable the application of genome editing tools to enhance the capacity of microbes to produce more targeted metabolites that will enhance microbial colonization.

Further, it will be exciting to employ CRISPR technologies for editing plant-microbe interactions to discover novel metabolic pathways and their modulation for plant immunity and fitness against abiotic as well as biotic stresses. Such metabolites possess tremendous scope in tailoring newer smart nano-based bio-formulations, besides formulating beneficial microbiomes or cocktails, which is the best alternative for climate resilient farming. The present review sheds light upon the deployment of CRISPR/Cas techniques to comprehend plant-microbe interactions, microbe-mediated abiotic and biotic stress resistance, genes edited for the development of fungal, bacterial, and viral disease resistance, nodulation process, PGP activity, CRISPR interference-based gene repression in the PGPM, metabolic pathway editing and their future implications in sustainable agriculture.

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