Just was following an extremely interesting presentation of one of our group's PhD students' projects, titled:
“Mining of the rhizosphere microbiome for potato late blight resistance” by Lihong Yan.

I cannot share too much but very interesting results are to come, that will change the way we think about phytopathology and resistance breeding. I will share Lhong We really should work more interdiciplinarily in plant breeding (and agronomy in general). Plants arent isolated units in an ecosystem. It's all connected an so should be different scientific disciplines.

Stay tuned!

#resistancebreeding #soilmicrobiome #potato #phyotpathology #interdisciplinarity

Paper of the week - week 33:

Gfeller et al. 2025:

Crop genotype modulates root rot resistance-associated microbial community composition and abundance of key taxa

"#Pea genotype markedly affected both fungal and bacterial community composition, and these genotype-specific #microbiota were associated with root rot resistance. For example, genotype resistance was correlated (R2 = 19%) with root fungal community composition. Further, several key microbes, showing a high relative abundance, heritability, connectedness with other #microbes, and correlation with plant resistance, were identified."

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40793-025-00755-w

First authored by my former colleage at FiBL, Valentin Gfeller, and co-authored by my PhD supervisor Pierre Hohmann @plant_holobiont

congrats!

#Breeding #Microbiome #Holobiont #PlantMicrobiome #Phyotpathology #PlantMicrobiomeInteraction #Roots #Root #benediktspapersoftheweek

Crop genotype modulates root rot resistance-associated microbial community composition and abundance of key taxa - Environmental Microbiome

Background Plants are constantly challenged by pathogens, which can cause substantial yield losses. The aggressiveness of and damage by pathogens depends on the host-associated microbiome, which might be shaped by plant genetics to improve resistance. How different crop genotypes modulate their microbiota when challenged by a complex of pathogens is largely unknown. Here, we investigate if and how pea (Pisum sativum L.) genotypes shape their root microbiota upon challenge by soil-borne pathogens and how this relates to a genotype’s resistance. Building on the phenotyping efforts of 252 pea genotypes grown in naturally infested soil, we characterized root fungi and bacteria by ITS region and 16 S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, respectively. Results Pea genotype markedly affected both fungal and bacterial community composition, and these genotype-specific microbiota were associated with root rot resistance. For example, genotype resistance was correlated (R2 = 19%) with root fungal community composition. Further, several key microbes, showing a high relative abundance, heritability, connectedness with other microbes, and correlation with plant resistance, were identified. Conclusions Our findings highlight the importance of crop genotype-specific root microbiota under root rot stress and the potential of the plant to shape its associated microbiota as a second line of defense.

SpringerLink