Abstract

Biological (or reductive) soil disinfestation (BSD or RSD) is a bioremediation process to control soil-borne plant pathogens using activities of indigenous bacteria in the soil. Three obligate anaerobic bacterial strains (TW1, TW10, and TB10), which were isolated from anoxic soil subjected to BSD treatments, were examined for their abilities to produce anti-fungal enzymes. All strains were affiliated with the different lineages of the genus Clostridium. The three strains decomposed β-1,3-glucans (curdlan and laminarin), and β-1,3-glucanase activities were detected from their culture supernatants with these glucans. The three strains also produced the enzyme with wheat bran as a growth substrate and killed the Fusarium pathogen (Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. spinaciae) in the anaerobic co-incubation conditions. Observation by fluorescence microscopy of the pathogen cells showed that the three strains had degraded the fungal cells in different manners upon co-incubation with wheat bran. When the three strains were cultivated with the dead cells or the cell wall samples prepared from the Fusarium pathogen, strain TW1 utilized these materials as easily decomposable substrates by releasing β-1,3-glucanase. When observed by fluorescence microscopy, it appeared that strain TW1 degraded the mycelial cell wall nearly thoroughly, with the septa remaining as undecomposed luminous rings. In contrast, the other two strains decomposed neither the dead cells nor the cell wall samples directly. The results indicate that the various anaerobic bacteria proliferated in the soil under the BSD treatments should play key roles as an organized bacterial community to eliminate fungal pathogens, namely by release of anti-fungal enzymes with different properties.Key points•Three clostridial strains isolated from BSD-treated soils produced β-1,3-glucanase.•All strains killed the Fusarium pathogen in the anaerobic co-incubation conditions.•One of the strains produced β-1,3-glucanase with the fungal cell wall as a substrate.•The strain degraded the cell wall almost completely, except for the mycelial septa.

Highlights

  • Biological soil disinfestation (BSD) is a method to control or eliminate soil-borne plant pathogens before crop cultivation, using both biological materials and microbial activities in soil without the application of agricultural chemicals

  • We reported that BSD treatments that use different types of biomass, such as wheat bran or Brassica juncea plants, clearly decreased the pathogen populations (Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici [wilt pathogen of tomato] and F. oxysporum f. sp. spinaciae [wilt pathogen of spinach]) that were incorporated into soil in model experiments (Mowlick et al 2012, 2013a)

  • Based on the analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences, most of the 20 anaerobic bacterial isolates from the soil samples that were subjected to BSD treatments were affiliated with the genus Clostridium in the class Clostridia (Lawson and Rainey 2016)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Biological soil disinfestation (BSD) is a method to control or eliminate soil-borne plant pathogens before crop cultivation, using both biological materials and microbial activities in soil without the application of agricultural chemicals. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol (2020) 104:5563–5578 suppressing soil-borne plant pathogens has been reported for various crops and plant diseases in different regions of the world (Browne et al 2018; Butler et al 2014; Huang et al 2016; Mazzola et al 2018; Meng et al 2018; Messiha et al 2007; Muramoto et al 2014; Serrano-Pérez et al 2017; Shennan et al 2018; Shrestha et al 2018) In this method, organic matter (usually plant biomass) needs to first be incorporated into the soil of the fields with irrigation water for moisture saturation. The key point of this method is to maintain the highly reductive conditions of the soil in the presence of the organic matter that is incorporated

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