The results published to date have been important and have contributed to move the plant microbiota research field forward.
1) Our observation that plants from diverse European habitats associate with the same small group of highly abundant microorganisms provides a basis for future rational design of low-complexity synthetic microbial communities (Thiergart et al., Nature Ecology & Evolution 2020).
2) A second major output was the discovery that the innate immune system of plants is insufficient to protect them from filamentous eukaryotes and that bactrerial root commensals provide an additional layer of protection, which is need for plant survival in natural soil. The results shed new light into the fact that microbe-microbe interactions are at least as important as host-microbe interactions to prevent dysbiosis in the root endosphere (Duran et al. Cell, 2018, Wolinska et al, PNAS, 2021). We also accidentally discovered a remarkable bi-directional signalling mechanism connecting chemical energy state in leaves and microbial assemblages in roots that promotes microbiota-induced growth or defence depending on the light condition. Our results, reminiscent of the microbiota-gut-brain axis described in animals, have important applications for utilizing belowground microbes to modulate aboveground stress responses in plants (Hou et al., Nature Plants, 2021).
3) We also identified fungal genetic determinants that explain why core fungi from the root mycobiome can robustly colonize roots and cause disease more efficiently than others. our results revealed that fungal enzymes degrading root tissues are key determinants shaping root mycobiome composition and modulating plant health (Mesny et al. Nature communications, 2021). We also recently identified bacterial genetic determinants required for root colonization using functional screens and genome-resolved metatranscriptomics approaches (Getzke et al. PNAS, 2023, Vannier et al. in preparation).
We also wrote several review articles to promote the major findings linked to microbe-microbe interactions (Hassani et al., Microbiome, 2018; Mataigne et al. Frontiers in Microbiology, 2021), microbiota-mediated disease resistance in plants (Vannier et al., PLoS Pathogens, 2019, Getzke et al. COIM 2019), and the microbiota-root-shoot axis (Hou et al., COiPB, 2021), or the influence of climate change on the plant microbiota (Hacquard et al. 2022). The role of microbe-microbe interactions and microbiota-root-shoot circuits in shaping plant health are emerging as important topics in the field.