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The lactonase BxdA mediates metabolic specialisation of maize root bacteria to benzoxazinoids.

Lisa ThönenMarco KreuzerChristine M PestalozziMatilde FloreanPierre MateoTobias ZüstAnlun WeiCaitlin GiroudLiza RouyerValentin GfellerMatheus D NotterEva KnochSiegfried HapfelmeierClaude BeckerNiklas SchandryChristelle Aurélie Maud RobertTobias G K LlnerRémy BruggmannMatthias ErbKlaus Schlaeppi
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Root exudates contain specialised metabolites that shape the plant's root microbiome. How host-specific microbes cope with these bioactive compounds, and how this ability affects root microbiomes, remains largely unknown. We investigated how maize root bacteria metabolise benzoxazinoids, the main specialised metabolites of maize. Diverse and abundant bacteria metabolised the major compound in the maize rhizosphere MBOA (6-methoxybenzoxazolin-2(3H)-one) and formed AMPO (2-amino-7-methoxy-phenoxazin-3-one). AMPO forming bacteria were enriched in the rhizosphere of benzoxazinoid-producing maize and could use MBOA as carbon source. We identified a gene cluster associated with AMPO formation in microbacteria. The first gene in this cluster, bxdA encodes a lactonase that converts MBOA to AMPO in vitro. A deletion mutant of the homologous bxdA genes in the genus Sphingobium, did not form AMPO nor was it able to use MBOA as a carbon source. BxdA was identified in different genera of maize root bacteria. Here we show that plant-specialised metabolites select for metabolisation-competent root bacteria. BxdA represents a benzoxazinoid metabolisation gene whose carriers successfully colonize the maize rhizosphere and thereby shape the plant's chemical environmental footprint.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • microbial community
  • ms ms
  • genome wide identification
  • dna damage
  • gene expression
  • dna repair
  • oxidative stress
  • climate change
  • cell wall
  • genome wide analysis