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      Exploiting endophytic microbes as micro-factories for plant secondary metabolite production

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          The Hidden World within Plants: Ecological and Evolutionary Considerations for Defining Functioning of Microbial Endophytes.

          All plants are inhabited internally by diverse microbial communities comprising bacterial, archaeal, fungal, and protistic taxa. These microorganisms showing endophytic lifestyles play crucial roles in plant development, growth, fitness, and diversification. The increasing awareness of and information on endophytes provide insight into the complexity of the plant microbiome. The nature of plant-endophyte interactions ranges from mutualism to pathogenicity. This depends on a set of abiotic and biotic factors, including the genotypes of plants and microbes, environmental conditions, and the dynamic network of interactions within the plant biome. In this review, we address the concept of endophytism, considering the latest insights into evolution, plant ecosystem functioning, and multipartite interactions.
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            Measurement of in situ activities of nonphotosynthetic microorganisms in aquatic and terrestrial habitats.

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              Multilocus sequence typing of bacteria.

              Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) was proposed in 1998 as a portable, universal, and definitive method for characterizing bacteria, using the human pathogen Neisseria meningitidis as an example. In addition to providing a standardized approach to data collection, by examining the nucleotide sequences of multiple loci encoding housekeeping genes, or fragments of them, MLST data are made freely available over the Internet to ensure that a uniform nomenclature is readily available to all those interested in categorizing bacteria. At the time of writing, over thirty MLST schemes have been published and made available on the Internet, mostly for pathogenic bacteria, although there are schemes for pathogenic fungi and some nonpathogenic bacteria. MLST data have been employed in epidemiological investigations of various scales and in studies of the population biology, pathogenicity, and evolution of bacteria. The increasing speed and reduced cost of nucleotide sequence determination, together with improved web-based databases and analysis tools, present the prospect of increasingly wide application of MLST.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
                Appl Microbiol Biotechnol
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0175-7598
                1432-0614
                September 2021
                August 31 2021
                September 2021
                : 105
                : 18
                : 6579-6596
                Article
                10.1007/s00253-021-11527-0
                34463800
                a9bde621-4ba9-49ce-ba11-94713fef0575
                © 2021

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

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