Rational management of the plant microbiome for the Second Green Revolution

Plant Commun. 2024 Apr 8;5(4):100812. doi: 10.1016/j.xplc.2024.100812. Epub 2024 Jan 11.

Abstract

The Green Revolution of the mid-20th century transformed agriculture worldwide and has resulted in environmental challenges. A new approach, the Second Green Revolution, seeks to enhance agricultural productivity while minimizing negative environmental impacts. Plant microbiomes play critical roles in plant growth and stress responses, and understanding plant-microbiome interactions is essential for developing sustainable agricultural practices that meet food security and safety challenges, which are among the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. This review provides a comprehensive exploration of key deterministic processes crucial for developing microbiome management strategies, including the host effect, the facilitator effect, and microbe-microbe interactions. A hierarchical framework for plant microbiome modulation is proposed to bridge the gap between basic research and agricultural applications. This framework emphasizes three levels of modulation: single-strain, synthetic community, and in situ microbiome modulation. Overall, rational management of plant microbiomes has wide-ranging applications in agriculture and can potentially be a core technology for the Second Green Revolution.

Keywords: Second Green Revolution; host effect; microbiome heritability; plant microbiome; rational management.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Agriculture / methods
  • Microbiota*
  • Plant Development
  • Plants*