TY - JOUR AU - Sarkar, Ranit AU - Sarkar, Manish AU - Roychoudhury, Aryadeep T1 - Rhizosphere Microbiome Signalling and Biotic Stress Tolerance in Plants JO - Journal of Stress Physiology & Biochemistry Y1 - 2025/june VL - 21 IS - 2 SP - 57 EP - 83 UR - http://www.jspb.ru/issues/2025/N2/JSPB_2025_2_57-83.pdf KW - Agricultural sustainability KW - biotic stress KW - plant pathogenesis KW - plant immunity KW - plant microbe interactions U1 - 1997-0838 N2 - In the age of ever-increasing population density, the escalating demand for food has to be met. Irrespective of whether individuals prefer animal-derived food or not, the pressure on agricultural systems continues to intensify as it provides the most sustainable means to feed the masses. The climatic variability of crops or dietary preferences is only a part of the problem. The major issue lies in the viability of plants and their resistance to abiotic and biotic stresses. Being a huge threat to agriculture, numerous efforts have been made to study and subdue the effects of biotic stress on plants. One such sustainable approach could be the utilisation of microbes inhabiting the rhizosphere. In this review, we thus shed some light on the practical data to discuss the rhizosphere microbiome and how it affects the plant, particularly in conferring resistance to biotic stresses via priming the host plant and promoting the induced systemic resistance (ISR), antagonistic or competitive interactions with pathogens, strengthening insect pest resistance and control and disease suppression. The prospects that this field holds when combined with superior techniques like genetic engineering are immense for the development of a viable and fully-fledged plan for attaining sustainable agriculture. ER -