Domestication has transformed hundreds of wild plant species into productive cultivars for human utility. However, cultivation practices and intense artificial selection for yield may entail a hidden cost: the disruption of interactions between plants and beneficial microbiota. Here, we synthesize theory predicting that evolutionary trade-offs, genetic costs, and relaxed selection disrupt plant-microbial symbiosis under domestication, and review the wealth of new data interrogating these predictions in crops. We describe the agronomic practices, ecological scenarios, and genomic attributes that can result in the disruption of symbiosis, and highlight new work probing its molecular basis. To improve agricultural output and sustainability, re...
Macroorganisms are colonized by microbial communities that exert important biological and ecological...
Until recently, domestication has been interpreted as a rapid process with little predomestication c...
<p>Crop domestication is the process of artificially selecting plants to increase their suitability ...
Plant domestication can be viewed as a form of co-evolved interspecific mutualism between humans and...
Early accessInternational audiencePlant domestication can be viewed as a form of co-evolved interspe...
Mutualistic plant–microbial functioning relies on co-adapted symbiotic partners as well as conducive...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
Modern agriculture intensely selects aboveground plant structures, while often neglecting belowgroun...
Domestication processes, amplified by breeding programs, have allowed the selection of more producti...
The arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis is key to plant nutrition, and hence is potentially key in...
In this review, references to the use of microorganisms in the process of plant domestication, genet...
For millennia, humans have imposed strong selection on domesticated crops, resulting in drastically ...
Innovative plant breeding and technology transfer fostered the Green Revolution (GR), which transfor...
The majority of the crops and vegetables of today were domesticated from their wild progenitors with...
AbstractDomestication is one of the most fundamental changes in the evolution of human societies. Th...
Macroorganisms are colonized by microbial communities that exert important biological and ecological...
Until recently, domestication has been interpreted as a rapid process with little predomestication c...
<p>Crop domestication is the process of artificially selecting plants to increase their suitability ...
Plant domestication can be viewed as a form of co-evolved interspecific mutualism between humans and...
Early accessInternational audiencePlant domestication can be viewed as a form of co-evolved interspe...
Mutualistic plant–microbial functioning relies on co-adapted symbiotic partners as well as conducive...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
Modern agriculture intensely selects aboveground plant structures, while often neglecting belowgroun...
Domestication processes, amplified by breeding programs, have allowed the selection of more producti...
The arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis is key to plant nutrition, and hence is potentially key in...
In this review, references to the use of microorganisms in the process of plant domestication, genet...
For millennia, humans have imposed strong selection on domesticated crops, resulting in drastically ...
Innovative plant breeding and technology transfer fostered the Green Revolution (GR), which transfor...
The majority of the crops and vegetables of today were domesticated from their wild progenitors with...
AbstractDomestication is one of the most fundamental changes in the evolution of human societies. Th...
Macroorganisms are colonized by microbial communities that exert important biological and ecological...
Until recently, domestication has been interpreted as a rapid process with little predomestication c...
<p>Crop domestication is the process of artificially selecting plants to increase their suitability ...