Global climate change is rapid and poses an alarming threat to agricultural production, significantly impacting economies. Modern agriculture has strongly emphasized improving nutrient availability in crops to address rising malnutrition and contribute to global food security. However, abiotic stresses, including warmer temperatures, drought, waterlogging stress, and elevated CO2, have critical direct and indirect effects on nutrient availability in plants. This systematic review was conducted in accordance with the PRISMA guidelines. The literature survey followed a time period of 2–5 months, during which the conceptualization, analysis, writing, and editing of the article were conducted. In the present era, it is essential to adopt measures to improve the nutritional value enhance Nutrient Use Efficiency (NUE) and nutrient management of plant-based foods. Plant-associated microbiomes have co-evolved with their plant counterparts and perform essential functions in nutrient acquisition, including microbial sensing and cross-talk with the plant host, nutrient uptake and sharing, and signaling mechanisms. In natural and agricultural ecosystems, plant microbiomes offer major opportunities and can be harnessed to sustainably supply essential plant nutrients and improve NUE in crops of global importance. Crop-associated microbiomes can be precisely tailored to achieve targeted outcomes, enhancing nutrient acquisition and utilization via microbiome engineering. However, bridging knowledge gaps, understanding microbial colonization, plant–microbiome dynamics, and adopting precise editing approaches are crucial to boost sustainable outcomes and crop productivity. By elucidating plant microbiome crosstalk and microbe–microbe signaling, a better understanding of microbe-mediated nutrient acquisition in plants can be achieved, defining key implications in global food security.
Tiwari et al. (Mon,) studied this question.