Plants live in biogeochemically diverse soils that harbor extraordinarily
diverse microbiota. Plant organs associate intimately with a subset of these
microbes; this community’s structure can be altered by soil nutrient
content. Plant-associated microbes can compete with the plant and with each
other for nutrients; they can also provide traits that increase plant
productivity. It is unknown how the plant immune system coordinates microbial
recognition with nutritional cues during microbiome assembly. We establish that
a genetic network controlling phosphate stress response influences root
microbiome community structure, even under non-stress phosphate conditions. We
define a molecular mechanism regulating coordination between nutrition and
defense in the presence of a synthetic bacterial community. We demonstrate that
the master transcriptional regulators of phosphate stress response in
Arabidopsis also directly repress defense, consistent with plant prioritization
of nutritional stress over defense. Our work will impact efforts to define and
deploy useful microbes to enhance plant performance.
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