Mangrove endophytes shorten the life cycle of rice while enhancing yield and salt tolerance

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Abstract

Global climate change increasingly challenges agriculture with flooding and salinity. Among strategies to enhance crop resilience to these stresses, we tested several endophytic bacterial strains from mangroves, which are permanently exposed to flooding and high salinity. We show several strains that can enhance flooding and salinity tolerance in Arabidopsis and rice plants. Two strains and their combination massively enhanced the growth and yield of Oryza sativa cv. Nipponbare under both soil and hydroponic growth conditions with and without salt treatment. The bacteria-induced transcriptome changes in O. sativa roots related to ABA-signaling with lignin and suberin deposition in root tissues explain the altered responses of colonized rice plants to hypoxic and saline stress conditions. While enhancing yield and grain quality, bacterially colonized rice plants also show much earlier flowering, thereby massively shortening the life cycle of rice plants and opening the possibility for an additional harvest per year. These results show that microbes can be a powerful tool for enhancing the yield and resilience of rice to hypoxic and saline stress conditions.

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