Feng Zhou
@fengzhou10.bsky.social
37 followers 65 following 3 posts
Principal Investigator, Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences (CEMPS), Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai. Contact: [email protected] https://scholar.google.ch/citations?hl=en&user=AYTPXvcAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
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fengzhou10.bsky.social
This discovery traces back to the spring of 2018, when I was a postdoc in nikogeldner.bsky.social 's lab. After shifting Arabidopsis seedlings from solid to liquid culture, I observed that the root commensal bacterium CHA0 rapidly colonized Casparian strip–defective mutants.
science.org
Using precise spatial and temporal analysis, researchers in Science provide insight into how bacteria around the root interact both with the plant and with each other.

Learn more in this week's issue: https://scim.ag/3WgNajk
A confocal microscopy image shows root-colonizing bacteria clustering around an emerging lateral root, where localized glutamine leakage induces spatially confined reporter activity.
Reposted by Feng Zhou
maddyseale.bsky.social
Wonderful to see this beautiful image on the cover of Science this week highlighting a paper that uses high resolution imaging to show the spatial patterns of bacterial attraction to glutamine from roots.
Paper here: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Perspective here: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
fengzhou10.bsky.social
I’m deeply pleased that we have been able to bring this work to fruition together and present it in Science Magazine. Thank you for the incredible support and collaboration over these past five years. Without each of your contributions, none of this would have been possible.
fengzhou10.bsky.social
Niko and I initially speculated that the defective barrier allowed sugars or mineral nutrients like potassium to leak from the central vascular tissue of roots. It was a complete surprise when Yuanjie Tang and hueihsuantsai.bsky.social later identified the key attractant as glutamine.
fengzhou10.bsky.social
This discovery traces back to the spring of 2018, when I was a postdoc in nikogeldner.bsky.social 's lab. After shifting Arabidopsis seedlings from solid to liquid culture, I observed that the root commensal bacterium CHA0 rapidly colonized Casparian strip–defective mutants.
science.org
Using precise spatial and temporal analysis, researchers in Science provide insight into how bacteria around the root interact both with the plant and with each other.

Learn more in this week's issue: https://scim.ag/3WgNajk
A confocal microscopy image shows root-colonizing bacteria clustering around an emerging lateral root, where localized glutamine leakage induces spatially confined reporter activity.