Abstract

Interest in chitin-degrading enzymes has grown over the years, and microbial chitinases are the most attractive and promising candidates for the control of plant pests (fungi and insects). Currently, there are many studies on chitinases produced by cultivable microorganisms; however, almost none of them have achieved acceptable applicability as a biopesticide in the field. Approximately 99% of the microorganisms from soil cannot be isolated by conventional culture-dependent methods, thus having an enormous biotechnological/genetic potential to be explored. On the basis of this, the present paper aims to provide a brief overview of the metagenomic opportunities that have been emerging and allowing access to the biochemical potential of uncultivable microorganisms through the direct mining of DNA sequences recovered from the environment. This work also shortly discussed the future perspectives of functional and sequence-based metagenomic approaches for the identification of new chitinase-coding genes with potential for applications in several agricultural and biotechnological industries, especially in biological control.

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