Abstract
Ascomycetes, basidiomycetes and deuteromycetes can degrade wood, but less attention has been paid to basidiomycetes involved in Esca, a major Grapevine Trunk Disease. Using a wood sawdust microcosm system, we compared the wood degradation of three grapevine cultivars inoculated with Fomitiporia mediterranea M. Fisch, a basidiomycete responsible for white-rot development and involved in Esca disease. The grapevine cultivar Ugni blanc was more susceptible to wood degradation caused by F. mediterranea than the cultivars Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. Solid-state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy showed that F. mediterranea preferentially degrades lignin and hemicellulose over cellulose (preferential, successive or sequential white-rot). In addition, co-inoculation of sawdust with two cellulolytic and xylanolytic bacterial strains of Paenibacillus (Nakamura) Ash (Paenibacillus sp. (S231-2) and P. amylolyticus (S293)), enhanced F. mediterranea ability to degrade Ugni blanc. The NMR data further showed that the increase in Ugni blanc sawdust degradation products was greater when bacteria and fungi were inoculated together. We also demonstrated that these two bacterial strains could degrade the wood components of Ugni blanc sawdust. Genome analysis of these bacterial strains revealed numerous genes predicted to be involved in cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin degradation, as well as several other genes related to bacteria-fungi interactions and endophytism inside the plant. The occurrence of this type of bacteria-fungus interaction could explain, at least in part, why necrosis develops extensively in certain grapevine varieties such as Ugni blanc.
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