Abstract

Wheat blast is a devastating fungal disease caused by a filamentous fungus, Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum (MoT) pathotype, which poses a serious threat to food security of South America and South Asia. In the course of screening novel bioactive secondary metabolites, we found that some secondary metabolites from a marine Bacillus subtilis strain 109GGC020 remarkably inhibited the growth of M. oryzae Triticum in vitro at 20 μg/disk. We tested a number of natural compounds derived from microorganisms and plants and found that five recently discovered linear non-cytotoxic lipopeptides, gageopeptides A–D (1–4) and gageotetrin B (5) from the strain 109GGC020 inhibited the growth of MoT mycelia in a dose-dependent manner. Among the five compounds studied, gageotetrin B (5) displayed the highest mycelial growth inhibition of MoT followed by gageopeptide C (3), gageopeptide D (4), gageopeptide A (1), and gageopeptide B (2) with minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of 1.5, 2.5, 2.5, 10.0, and 10.0 μg/disk, respectively. Application of these natural compounds has also completely blocked formation of conidia in the MoT fungal mycelia in the agar medium. Further bioassay revealed that these compounds (1–5) inhibited the germination of MoT conidia and, if germinated, induced deformation of germ tube and/or abnormal appressoria. Interestingly, application of these linear lipopeptides (1–5) significantly suppressed wheat blast disease on detached wheat leaves. This is the first report of the inhibition of mycelial growth, conidiogenesis, conidial germination, and morphological alterations in the germinated conidia and suppression of wheat blast disease by linear lipopeptides from the strain of B. subtilis. A further study is needed to evaluate the mode of action of these natural compounds for considering them as biopesticides for managing this notorious cereal killer.

Highlights

  • Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is a critical staple food providing 20% of the calories and over 25% of the protein consumed by humans [Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO),1]

  • To see whether natural products inhibit Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum (MoT) fungus, we tested a number of secondary metabolites from different plants and microorganisms

  • We found that five linear LPs, namely, gageopeptide A (1), gageopeptide B (2), gageopeptide C (3), gageopeptide D (4), and gageotetrin B (5), isolated from the marine bacterium, Bacillus subtilis strain 109GGC020, showed strong antifungal activities against a destructive wheat blast pathogen, Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is a critical staple food providing 20% of the calories and over 25% of the protein consumed by humans [Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO),1]. Wheat blast affects wheat plants at all developmental stages and can attack leaves, stems, nodes, and panicles (Wilson and Talbot, 2009; Islam et al, 2016a, 2019; Ceresini et al, 2019). Critical stages in the disease cycle caused by MoT include pyriform conidia produced from cylindrical conidiophores and germination of conidia with appressorial structures at the tip of germ tubes (Tufan et al, 2009).

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call