FIGURE 2.2 Mechanism of rhizosphere microbes to minimize the various biotic and abiotic
stresses.
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Biology and Biotechnology of Environmental Stress Tolerance in Plants, Volume 3
2.7 MICROBES IN TOLERANCE TO BIOTIC STRESS
Plant-microbe interactions are critical for appropriate growth and develop
ment in natural settings. They are vital for nutrition mobilization and pathogen
defense (Shoebitz et al., 2009). Under abiotic stress, biological management
of soil-transmitted illnesses, replacing the chemically produced agents, have
a substantial impact on crop productivity. Different elicitors are released
when microorganisms interact with plants, causing physio-biochemical
changes in the flora distribution. For several months, these modifications
result in disease resistance in the plant. An essential mechanism for biotic
stress tolerance is the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and
oxidative burst (Miller et al., 2010). The systemic acquired resistance along
with induced systematic resistance (ISR) are two types of defensive reac
tion mechanisms induced by bacteria (SAR). Non-morbific root correlated
plant’s growth-boosting microorganisms may increase the ISR, whereas
SAR includes changes in gene expression at the molecular level and is
linked to pathogenesis associated/related (PR) proteins. Both ISR As well as