scholarly journals Pepper Bacterial Spot Control by Bacillus velezensis: Bioprocess Solution

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1463
Author(s):  
Ivana Pajčin ◽  
Vanja Vlajkov ◽  
Marcus Frohme ◽  
Sergii Grebinyk ◽  
Mila Grahovac ◽  
...  

Pepper bacterial spot is one of the most severe plant diseases in terms of infection persistence and economic losses when it comes to fresh pepper fruits used in nutrition and industrial processing. In this study, Bacillus velezensis IP22 isolated from fresh cheese was used as a biocontrol agent of pepper bacterial spot, whose main causal agent is the cosmopolitan pathogen Xanthomonas euvesicatoria. After optimization of the cultivation medium composition aimed at maximizing of the antimicrobial activity against X. euvesicatoria and validation of the optimized medium at the scale of a laboratory bioreactor, in planta tests were performed. The results have showed significant suppression of bacterial spot symptoms in pepper plants by the produced biocontrol agent, as well as reduction of disease spreading on the healthy (uninoculated) pepper leaves. Furthermore, HPLC-MS (high pressure liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry) analysis was employed to examine antimicrobial metabolites produced by B. velezensis IP22, where lipopeptides were found with similar m/z values compared to lipopeptides from fengycin and locillomycin families. The bioprocess solution developed at the laboratory scale investigated in this study represents a promising strategy for production of pepper bacterial spot biocontrol agent based on B. velezensis IP22, a food isolate with a great perspective for application in plant protection.

Agronomy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed Abdelkhalek ◽  
Said I. Behiry ◽  
Abdulaziz A. Al-Askar

Bacillus velezensis manifests robust biocontrol activity against fungal plant pathogens; however, its antiviral activity has rarely been investigated. Bacillus velezensis strain PEA1 was isolated, characterized, and evaluated for antifungal and antiviral activities against Fusarium oxysporum MT270445 and cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) MN594112. Our findings proved that strain PEA1 had intense antagonist activity against F.oxysporum. Under greenhouse conditions, the antiviral activities (protective, curative, and inactivation) of PEA1-culture filtrate (CF) on Datura stramonium plants were assayed, using a half-leaf method. The inactivation treatment exhibited the highest inhibition rate (97.56%) and the most considerable reduction of CMV-CP accumulation levels (2.1-fold) in PEA1-CF-treated plants when compared with untreated plants (26.9-fold). Furthermore, PEA1-CF induced systemic resistance with significantly elevated transcriptional levels of PAL, CHS, HQT, PR-1, and POD genes in D. stramonium leaves after all treatments. Gas chromatography‒mass spectrometry analysis showed that pyrrolo[1,2-a]pyrazine-1,4-dione is the main compound in the PEA1-CF ethyl acetate extract, which may act as an elicitor molecule that induces plant systemic resistance and inhibits both fungal growth and viral replication. Consequently, B. velezensis can be considered as a potential source for the production of bioactive compounds for the management of plant diseases. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the antiviral activity of B. velezensis against plant viral infection.


Author(s):  
Xingshan Han ◽  
Dongxia Shen ◽  
Qin Xiong ◽  
Beihua Bao ◽  
Wenbo Zhang ◽  
...  

Soybean root rot caused by the oomycete Phytophthora sojae is a serious soil-borne disease threatening soybean production in China. Bacillus velezensis FZB42 is a model strain for Gram-positive plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria and is able to produce multiple antibiotics. In this study, we demonstrated that B. velezensis FZB42 can efficiently antagonize P. sojae. The underlying mechanism for the inhibition was then investigated. The FZB42 mutants deficient in the synthesis of lipopeptides (bacillomycin D and fengycin), known for antifungal activities, and polyketides (bacillaene, difficidin, and macrolactin), known for antibacterial activities, were not impaired in their antagonism toward P. sojae ; in contrast, mutants deficient in bacilysin biosynthesis completely lost their antagonistic activities toward P. sojae , indicating that bacilysin was responsible for the activity. Isolated pure bacilysin confirmed this inference. Bacilysin was previously shown to be antagonistic mainly toward prokaryotic bacteria rather than eukaryotes. Here, we found that bacilysin could severely damage the hyphal structures of P. sojae and lead to the loss of their intracellular contents. A device was invented allowing interactions between P. sojae and B. velezensis FZB42 on nutrient agar. In this manner, the effect of FZB42 on P. sojae was studied by transcriptomics. FZB42 significantly inhibited the expression of P. sojae genes related to growth, macromolecule biosynthesis, pathogenicity, and ribosomes. Among them, the genes for pectate lyase were the most significantly downregulated. Additionally, we showed that bacilysin effectively prevents soybean sprouts from being infected by P. sojae and could antagonize diverse Phytophthora species, such as P. palmivora , P. melonis , P. capsici , P. litchi , and, most importantly, P. infestans . Importance Phytophthora spp. are widespread eukaryotic phytopathogens and often extremely harmful. Phytophthora can infect many types of plants important to agriculture and forestry and thus cause large economic losses. Perhaps due to inappropriate recognition of Phytophthora as a common pathogen in history, research on the biological control of Phytophthora is limited. This study shows that B. velezensis FZB42 can antagonize various Phytophthora species and prevent the infection of soybean seedlings by P. sojae . The antibiotic produced by FZB42, bacilysin, which was previously known to have antibacterial effectiveness, is responsible for the inhibitory action against Phytophthora . We further showed that some Phytophthora genes and pathways may be targeted in future biocontrol studies. Therefore, our data provide a basis for the development of new tools for the prevention and control of root and stem rot in soybean and other plant diseases caused by Phytophthora .


2007 ◽  
Vol 73 (20) ◽  
pp. 6629-6636 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arik Makovitzki ◽  
Ada Viterbo ◽  
Yariv Brotman ◽  
Ilan Chet ◽  
Yechiel Shai

ABSTRACT Plant diseases constitute an emerging threat to global food security. Many of the currently available antimicrobial agents for agriculture are highly toxic and nonbiodegradable and cause extended environmental pollution. Moreover, an increasing number of phytopathogens develop resistance to them. Recently, we have reported on a new family of ultrashort antimicrobial lipopeptides which are composed of only four amino acids linked to fatty acids (A. Makovitzki, D. Avrahami, and Y. Shai, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 103:15997-16002, 2006). Here, we investigated the activities in vitro and in planta and the modes of action of these short lipopeptides against plant-pathogenic bacteria and fungi. They act rapidly, at low micromolar concentrations, on the membranes of the microorganisms via a lytic mechanism. In vitro microscopic analysis revealed wide-scale damage to the microorganism's membrane, in addition to inhibition of pathogen growth. In planta potent antifungal activity was demonstrated on cucumber fruits and leaves infected with the pathogen Botrytis cinerea as well as on corn leaves infected with Cochliobolus heterostrophus. Similarly, treatment with the lipopeptides of Arabidopsis leaves infected with the bacterial leaf pathogen Pseudomonas syringae efficiently and rapidly reduced the number of bacteria. Importantly, in contrast to what occurred with many native lipopeptides, no toxicity was observed on the plant tissues. These data suggest that the ultrashort lipopeptides could serve as native-like antimicrobial agents economically feasible for use in plant protection.


2004 ◽  
Vol 82 (7) ◽  
pp. 878-885 ◽  
Author(s):  
C W Bacon ◽  
D M Hinton ◽  
J K Porter ◽  
A E Glenn ◽  
G Kuldau

An endophytic bacterium, Bacillus mojavensis Roberts, Nakamura & Cohan, was patented as a nonpathogenic biocontrol for plant diseases. However, before this bacterium can be used as a biocontrol agent, it must be evaluated against homologous competing organisms, some of which are equally successful endophytes, such as species of Fusarium that are symptomless endophytes, especially on maize. Preliminary field trials using this bacterium as a biocontrol agent against production of the fumonisin mycotoxins caused by infection of maize with Fusarium verticillioides (Sacc.) Nirenberg (= Fusarium moniliforme Sheldon) was less than that observed with greenhouse studies. Fusarium verticillioides and other species produce fusaric acid. Fusaric acid at concentrations as low as 22 µmol/L accounted for a 41% reduction in CFU compared with the control group, while concentrations of 223 µmol/L and higher resulted in total toxicity to the bacterium. Mutants of F. verticillioides that produced low concentrations of fusaric acid did not affect the endophytic CFU of the bacterium in seedlings. These results suggest that fusaric acid accounted for the reduction of bacterial colonization and the resulting poor biocontrol activity and suggested its importance to the fungus is as an antibiotic, which assists in the in planta competition for the intercellular niche colonized by F. verticillioides during its endotrophic state.Key words: Fusarium moniliforme, Fusarium verticillioides, bacterial endophyte, fungal endophyte, fumonisin.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Delphine Chinchilla ◽  
Sébastien Bruisson ◽  
Silvan Meyer ◽  
Daniela Zühlke ◽  
Claudia Hirschfeld ◽  
...  

AbstractPlant diseases are a major cause for yield losses and new strategies to control them without harming the environment are urgently needed. Plant-associated bacteria contribute to their host’s health in diverse ways, among which the emission of disease-inhibiting volatile organic compounds (VOCs). We have previously reported that VOCs emitted by potato-associated bacteria caused strong in vitro growth inhibition of the late blight causing agent Phytophthora infestans. This work focuses on sulfur-containing VOCs (sVOCs) and demonstrates the high in planta protective potential of S-methyl methane thiosulfonate (MMTS), which fully prevented late blight disease in potato leaves and plantlets without phytotoxic effects, in contrast to other sVOCs. Short exposure times were sufficient to protect plants against infection. We further showed that MMTS’s protective activity was not mediated by the plant immune system but lied in its anti-oomycete activity. Using quantitative proteomics, we determined that different sVOCs caused specific proteome changes in P. infestans, indicating perturbations in sulfur metabolism, protein translation and redox balance. This work brings new perspectives for plant protection against the devastating Irish Famine pathogen, while opening new research avenues on the role of sVOCs in the interaction between plants and their microbiome.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianxin Chen ◽  
Yuqian Wei ◽  
Zejia Lv ◽  
Qingli Han ◽  
Yuan Zheng ◽  
...  

Polygonatum kingianum, a member of the Liliaceae, is valued in traditional medicine and as a vegetable food crop. In July 2019, more than 50% of P. kingianum growth was suppressed in several field nurseries in Simao, Mojiang, Jingdong and Lancang County, Puer City, China. At the early stage of infection, symptoms manifested as a small circular brown spot. As the lesion matured, the spot gradually enlarged, forming an oval to irregular lesion with reddish-brown and dark green borders. In serious cases, the leaves were withered, and became brittle with cracks. The infected plants were collected from six major fields. The tissues of diseased leaves were soaked in 75% ethanol for 10 s, 0.1% mercuric chloride for 2 min, rinsed with sterilized water, and placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25℃ for 7 days. On PDA, four strains were isolated, and the colony was gray to dark yellowish-brown, flocculent, regular with concentric growth rings. Strain PKLS06 produced a dark red to brown pigment in the agar medium. On lesions, the conidiophores were solitary or in fascicles, straight or slightly curved, brown, with a conical apex, with three to five septa. The conidiogenous cells were pale-brown and swollen at the apex. On PDA, spores were solitary, oblong, bluntly rounded or sometimes with a point at the apex, with two to five transverse septa and one to two longitudinal septa with contractions at the main transverse septum. Morphological characteristics were consistent with published descriptions of Stemphylium lycopersici (Kee et al. 2017; Xie et al. 2018). For molecular identification, rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (gpd) gene were amplified and sequenced (ITS accessions: MW243098, MW243099, MW243100, MW243101; gpd accessions: MW246803, MW246804, MW246805, MW246806) using published primers (White et al. 1990; Câmara et al. 2002). A phylogenetic tree was developed by Maximum Parsimony (MP), Maximum Likelihood (ML) and Bayesian inference (BI). These four isolates fall into the S. lycopersici clade with strong support and all isolates were distinguished clearly from other species. Pathogenicity tests were performed using these four isolates. Each isolate was cultured on PDA and shake-cultured in V-8 juice broth (Nasehi et al. 2014). Conidia were resuspended in sterilized water (1×106 conidia/mL) and inoculated on intact leaves with injury of 1-year-old P. kingianum. The plants were incubated at 25℃ with a 12 h photoperiod and 90% humidity. A small spot began to appear after 3 days, and symptoms were similar to the those observed in the nursery after 10 days. Interestingly, the pathogenicity of strain PKLS06 was relatively weaker. Control plants treated with sterile water showed no disease symptoms. Re-isolated strains had the same morphological characteristics and the same ITS and gpd sequences as the original isolates, thus fulfilling Koch’s postulates. S. lycopersici, an important pathogen, is widely distributed, and can cause a variety of plant diseases. It is noteworthy that the disease was observed on a plant in the Liliaceae, expanding the host range of S. lycopersici, which previously was reported to primarily infect plants in the Solanaceae. Based on the results presented above, P. kingianum is a new host plant of S. lycopersici in China. This disease is a threat for nursery production of P. kingianum, leading to a reduction in yields and economic losses. References Kee, Y. J., et al. 2017. Plant Disease 102 (2): 445–446 Xie, X. W., et al. 2019. Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology-Revue Canadienne De Phytopathologie 41 (1): 124–128 White, T. J., et al. 1990. PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications 18: 315–322 Câmara M. P. S., et al. 2002. Mycologia 94 (4): 660–672 Nasehi A., et al. 2014. Archives of Phytopathology & Plant Protection, 47 (14): 1658-1665.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 3830
Author(s):  
Ahmad Almadhor ◽  
Hafiz Tayyab Rauf ◽  
Muhammad Ikram Ullah Lali ◽  
Robertas Damaševičius ◽  
Bader Alouffi ◽  
...  

Plant diseases can cause a considerable reduction in the quality and number of agricultural products. Guava, well known to be the tropics’ apple, is one significant fruit cultivated in tropical regions. It is attacked by 177 pathogens, including 167 fungal and others such as bacterial, algal, and nematodes. In addition, postharvest diseases may cause crucial production loss. Due to minor variations in various guava disease symptoms, an expert opinion is required for disease analysis. Improper diagnosis may cause economic losses to farmers’ improper use of pesticides. Automatic detection of diseases in plants once they emerge on the plants’ leaves and fruit is required to maintain high crop fields. In this paper, an artificial intelligence (AI) driven framework is presented to detect and classify the most common guava plant diseases. The proposed framework employs the ΔE color difference image segmentation to segregate the areas infected by the disease. Furthermore, color (RGB, HSV) histogram and textural (LBP) features are applied to extract rich, informative feature vectors. The combination of color and textural features are used to identify and attain similar outcomes compared to individual channels, while disease recognition is performed by employing advanced machine-learning classifiers (Fine KNN, Complex Tree, Boosted Tree, Bagged Tree, Cubic SVM). The proposed framework is evaluated on a high-resolution (18 MP) image dataset of guava leaves and fruit. The best recognition results were obtained by Bagged Tree classifier on a set of RGB, HSV, and LBP features (99% accuracy in recognizing four guava fruit diseases (Canker, Mummification, Dot, and Rust) against healthy fruit). The proposed framework may help the farmers to avoid possible production loss by taking early precautions.


Plant Disease ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 103 (10) ◽  
pp. 2577-2586
Author(s):  
Leonor Martins ◽  
Camila Fernandes ◽  
Pedro Albuquerque ◽  
Fernando Tavares

Xanthomonas arboricola pv. juglandis is the etiologic agent of important walnut (Juglans regia L.) diseases, causing severe fruit drop and high economic losses in walnut production regions. Rapid diagnostics and knowledge of bacterial virulence fitness are key to hinder disease progression and apply timely phytosanitary measures. This work describes an X. arboricola pv. juglandis-specific real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) using X. arboricola pv. juglandis-specific DNA markers to quantify the bacterial load in infected walnut plant tissues. Method validation was achieved using calibration curves obtained with serial dilutions of X. arboricola pv. juglandis chromosomal DNA and standard curves obtained from walnut samples spiked with X. arboricola pv. juglandis cells. High correlations (R2 > 0.990 and > 0.995) and low limits of detection (35 chromosomes/qPCR reaction and 2.7 CFU/qPCR reaction) were obtained for both markers considering the calibration and standard curves, respectively. Assessment of qPCR repeatability, reproducibility, and specificity allowed us to demonstrate the reliability and consistency of the method. Furthermore, in planta quantification of X. arboricola pv. juglandis bacterial load using infected walnut fruit samples showed a higher detection resolution compared with standard PCR detection. By allowing quantification of virulence fitness of distinct X. arboricola pv. juglandis strains in planta, the proposed qPCR method may contribute to assertive risk assessment of walnut diseases caused by X. arboricola pv. juglandis and ultimately help to improve phytosanitary practices.


2012 ◽  
Vol 102 (7) ◽  
pp. 652-655 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. L. Everts ◽  
L. Osborne ◽  
A. J. Gevens ◽  
S. J. Vasquez ◽  
B. K. Gugino ◽  
...  

Extension plant pathologists deliver science-based information that protects the economic value of agricultural and horticultural crops in the United States by educating growers and the general public about plant diseases. Extension plant pathologists diagnose plant diseases and disorders, provide advice, and conduct applied research on local and regional plant disease problems. During the last century, extension plant pathology programs have adjusted to demographic shifts in the U.S. population and to changes in program funding. Extension programs are now more collaborative and more specialized in response to a highly educated clientele. Changes in federal and state budgets and policies have also reduced funding and shifted the source of funding of extension plant pathologists from formula funds towards specialized competitive grants. These competitive grants often favor national over local and regional plant disease issues and typically require a long lead time to secure funding. These changes coupled with a reduction in personnel pose a threat to extension plant pathology programs. Increasing demand for high-quality, unbiased information and the continued reduction in local, state, and federal funds is unsustainable and, if not abated, will lead to a delay in response to emerging diseases, reduce crop yields, increase economic losses, and place U.S. agriculture at a global competitive disadvantage. In this letter, we outline four recommendations to strengthen the role and resources of extension plant pathologists as they guide our nation's food, feed, fuel, fiber, and ornamental producers into an era of increasing technological complexity and global competitiveness.


Insects ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 70
Author(s):  
Yu Wang ◽  
Yang-Yang Hou ◽  
Giovanni Benelli ◽  
Nicolas Desneux ◽  
Asad Ali ◽  
...  

The Asian corn borer (ACB), Ostrinia furnicalis, is a serious corn pest in south-east Asia, causing huge economic losses every year. Trichogramma dendrolimi and Trichogramma ostriniae, two egg parasitoids, have previously been identified as key biological control agents. To determine the age impact of ACB eggs on their effective biocontrol potential, herein we compared the biological parameters (i.e., number of parasitized eggs, emergence, developmental time, and sex ratio) of both parasitoids on ACB eggs of various ages (i.e., 0–4, 4–8, 8–12, 12–16, 16–24, 24–36, and 36–48 h old), respectively. Our results showed that the age of ACB eggs had a significant impact on the parasitization activity of T. dendrolimi in both choice and no-choice conditions. Trichogramma dendrolimi preferred to parasitize 0–8-h-old ACB eggs, and its parasitization dramatically declined on ACB eggs older than 8 h under choice and no-choice conditions. On the other hand, T. ostriniae showed high preference to parasitize all tested ACB egg ages. The age of ACB eggs had no significant impact on the parasitization of T. ostriniae under choice and no-choice conditions. Furthermore, the female progeny of T. dendrolimi decreased as the age of ACB increased, while no differences were found in female progeny of T. ostriniae. Trichogramma ostriniae also developed faster on each ACB egg age group in comparison with T. dendrolimi. Overall, the age of ACB eggs had a significant impact on T. dendrolimi performance, leading us to conclude that T. ostriniae is more effective than T. dendrolimi as a biocontrol agent of the ACB.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document