Abstract

Strains of selected bacteria and Trichoderma harzianum isolated from sugarcane rhizosphere and endosphere regions were tested for the production of chitinolytic enzymes and their involvement in the suppression of Colletotrichum falcatum, red rot pathogen of sugarcane. Among several strains tested for chitinolytic activity, 12 strains showed a clearing zone on chitin-amended agar medium. Among these, bacterial strains AFG2, AFG 4, AFG 10, FP7 and VPT4 and all the tested T. harzianum strains produced clearing zones of a size larger than 10 mm. The antifungal activity of these strains increased when chitin was incorporated into the medium. Trichoderma harzianum strain T5 showed increased levels of activity of N-acetylglucosaminidase and β-1,3-glucanase when grown on minimal medium containing chitin or cell wall of the pathogen. Lytic enzymes of bacterial strains AFG2, AFG4, VPT4 and FP7 and T. harzianum T5 inhibited conidial germination and mycelial growth of the pathogen. Enzymes from T. harzianum T5 were found to be the most effective in inhibiting the fungus. When mycelial discs of the pathogen were treated with the enzymes, electrolytes were released from fungal mycelia. The results indicated that antagonistic T. harzianum T5 caused a higher level of lysis of the pathogen mycelium, and the inhibitory effect was more pronounced when the lytic enzymes were produced using chitin or cell wall of the pathogen as carbon source.

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