Harnessing eCISs for precision phytomicrobiome engineering and biocontrol
Gunarathna R D S Madushani, Xue Wu, Wikum H Jayasinghe, Qi Wang, Kumar Vinit, Ge-Fei Hao

TL;DR
Engineered eCISs offer a precise, eco-friendly alternative to chemical pesticides by targeting harmful microbes while preserving beneficial ones in crops.
Contribution
This study explores the novel use of engineered extracellular contractile injection systems (eCISs) for precision biocontrol in plant microbiomes.
Findings
eCISs can selectively deliver payloads to specific microbes in plant-associated communities.
Engineered eCISs show potential for sustainable biocontrol by reducing environmental harm.
eCISs offer higher host specificity compared to broader biological control methods.
Abstract
Plant microbiome disruption often increases vulnerability to crop diseases, endangering worldwide food production, while chemical pesticides become increasingly less viable and continue to damage ecosystems. To safeguard plant microbiome health, several biological control strategies offer alternatives, yet many operate through broader or weakly defined target mechanisms. In recent years, bacterial contractile injection systems (BCISs) have emerged as a promising class of naturally evolved nanomachines that translocate molecular payloads directly into target cells. Subsets of these systems, extracellular contractile injection systems (eCISs), are distinguished by their specific narrow host range and receptor-dependent specificity. Recent studies have demonstrated that eCISs provide a transformative approach for targeted microbial manipulation, enabling the delivery of specialized…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant-Microbe Interactions and Immunity · Bacterial biofilms and quorum sensing · Transgenic Plants and Applications
