2.1 What work was performed during the project?
The scientific content of PINBAC was divided into three Work Packages. The Work Package 1 involved reviewing the scientific literature, to summarise the role of soil microorganisms in plant mineral nutrition. Work Package 2 used modern experimental methods to analyse how rhizosphere bacterial strains metabolise different nitrogen sources. Work Package 3 developed and implemented a novel methodological approach for studying the bacterial consumption of root-derived metabolites.
2.2 What were the main results achieved?
In the literature review (Work Package 1), members of the PINBAC project collated the scientific literature from several different disciplines to summarise how plants can shape their rhizosphere microbiome via root exudates, and also which microbial genes are linked to enhancing plant nutrition. In the proteomic study of nitrogen metabolism (Work Package 2), PINBAC provided detailed new knowledge about microbial nitrogen metabolism in the rhizosphere, by defining the metabolic pathways that diverse rhizosphere bacterial strains utilise to metabolise organic sources of nitrogen. In the exometabolomic study of how bacteria consume plant root metabolites (Work Package 3), PINBAC developed a novel methodological approach for studying nutrient exchange between plants and microbes, as well as defining the specific root metabolites that rhizosphere bacterial strains consume as growth substrates.
2.3 How were the results communicated and disseminated?
The primary communications aim of the PINBAC project was to publish open-access papers in peer-reviewed journals. This has been achieved, with publications detailing the results of Work Package 1 (Jacoby et al, 2017, Front Pla Sci: 8) and also Work Package 3 (Jacoby et al, 2018, Mol Plant Microbe In: 31; 803). A manuscript summarising the results of Work Package 2 is in preparation and expected to be submitted in the next few months. Both published articles are open-access, and the third manuscript will be submitted to an open-access journal. Furthermore, all primary metabolomics data associated with Deliverable 3 are publicly available via deposition in the MetaboLights repository, while the proteomics data associated with Deliverable 2 will be deposited in the ProtemeXchange repository upon submission. To communicate the results of PINBAC to a general audience, one avenue was the ‘Planter’s Punch’ contributed by Dr Jacoby in October 2017. The Planter’s Punch is a series of online articles that summarise CEPLAS research to a non-scientific readership. Another avenue for public engagement was the series of public lectures given by Prof. Kopriva as part of UoC’s Competence Area for Food Security, where a broad range of topics were discussed, including the role of plant science in shaping environmental sustainability and human nutrition.