The common symbiosis pathway controls plant root microbiomes in a host-specific manner
Crop nutrition depends on plant-microbe interactions, yet it remains unclear whether conserved genetic pathways impose universal rules on root microbiome assembly across plant hosts. Here, we show that the Common Symbiosis Signalling Pathway (CSSP), a conserved genetic module controlling endosymbiosis with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and nitrogen-fixing bacteria, regulates root microbiome assembly in a host-specific manner across contrasting fertilisation regimes. Using Lotus japonicus and Hordeum vulgare, we demonstrate that mutations in orthologous CSSP genes remodel root bacterial communities in both species, but with distinct taxonomic outcomes. In Lotus, CSSP disruption reduces rhizobi