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DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011915
¤ OpenAccess: Gold
This work has “Gold” OA status. This means it is published in an Open Access journal that is indexed by the DOAJ.

Turning the Table: Plants Consume Microbes as a Source of Nutrients

Chanyarat Paungfoo‐Lonhienne,Doris Rentsch,Silke Robatzek,Richard I. Webb,Evgeny Sagulenko,Torgny Näsholm,Susanne Schmidt,Thierry Lonhienne

Autotroph
Nutrient
Biology
2010
Interactions between plants and microbes in soil, the final frontier of ecology, determine the availability of nutrients to plants and thereby primary production of terrestrial ecosystems. Nutrient cycling in soils is considered a battle between autotrophs and heterotrophs in which the latter usually outcompete the former, although recent studies have questioned the unconditional reign of microbes on nutrient cycles and the plants' dependence on microbes for breakdown of organic matter. Here we present evidence indicative of a more active role of plants in nutrient cycling than currently considered. Using fluorescent-labeled non-pathogenic and non-symbiotic strains of a bacterium and a fungus (Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, respectively), we demonstrate that microbes enter root cells and are subsequently digested to release nitrogen that is used in shoots. Extensive modifications of root cell walls, as substantiated by cell wall outgrowth and induction of genes encoding cell wall synthesizing, loosening and degrading enzymes, may facilitate the uptake of microbes into root cells. Our study provides further evidence that the autotrophy of plants has a heterotrophic constituent which could explain the presence of root-inhabiting microbes of unknown ecological function. Our discovery has implications for soil ecology and applications including future sustainable agriculture with efficient nutrient cycles.
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    Turning the Table: Plants Consume Microbes as a Source of Nutrients” is a paper by Chanyarat Paungfoo‐Lonhienne Doris Rentsch Silke Robatzek Richard I. Webb Evgeny Sagulenko Torgny Näsholm Susanne Schmidt Thierry Lonhienne published in 2010. It has an Open Access status of “gold”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.