Breeding of microbiomes conferring salt tolerance to plants
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Microbiome breeding by host-mediated selection is a technique to artificially select for microbiomes conferring benefits to plants. Here, we describe leaf ionomics, microbial community composition, and network analyses of a microbiome-breeding experiment to generate microbiomes conferring salt tolerance to Brachypodium distachyon, a model for cereal crops. Plants receiving microbiomes selected to confer tolerance to either sodium- or aluminium-stress produced 69-198% higher total seed weight than plants receiving control microbiomes. Sodium-selected microbiomes reduced leaf-sodium concentration by 50%, whereas aluminium-selected microbiomes had no effect on leaf-tissue nutrient concentration, suggesting different mechanisms underlying microbiome-mediated salt tolerance. By testing these selected microbiomes in a cross-fostering experiment, we show that artificially-selected microbiomes attain (a) ecological robustness contributing to transplantability (inheritance) of microbiome-encoded effects between plants; and (b) network features identifying key bacteria promoting stress tolerance. Combined, these findings elucidate critical mechanisms underlying host-mediated selection as a tool to breed beneficial microbiomes in an agricultural context.