The Potential of Novel Bacterial Isolates from Natural Soil for the Control of Brown Rot Disease (Monilinia fructigena) on Apple Fruits
Type de document
journalArticle
Langue source
Anglais
Titre français
Titre anglais
The Potential of Novel Bacterial Isolates from Natural Soil for the Control of Brown Rot Disease (Monilinia fructigena) on Apple Fruits
Auteur(s)
- LAHLALI Rachid
- MCHACHTI Ouafae
- RADOUANE Nabil
- EZRARI Said
- BELABESS Zineb
- KHAYI Slimane
- MENTAG Rachid
- TAHIRI Abdessalem
- BARKA Essaid Ait
Editeur(s)
Autre(s)
Id
LTCSITQI
Version
2297
Date ajout
6 janvier 2021 16:24
Date modification
6 janvier 2021 16:24
Résumé anglais
Monilinia fructigena is one of the most important fungal pathogens causing brown rot on apple and is heavily affecting fruit production. The main objective of this study was to screen for potential bacterial isolates with higher antagonistic activity against M. fructigena. Our study focused on the identification of potential bacterial isolates capable of reducing both the mycelial growth of M. fructigena and the disease severity using in vitro and in planta trials, respectively. To achieve this goal, thirteen bacteria, isolated from natural soil, were evaluated for their abilities to produce lytic enzymes (amylase, cellulase and protease), hydrocyanic acid (HCN) and lipopeptides (bacillomycin, fengycin, iturin and surfactin). Further, results from the dual culture method, volatile and bacterial free-cell filtrate bioassays indicated that tested isolates showed a fungicidal activity against the mycelial growth of M. fructigena. Thus, out of the 13 isolates tested, 12 exhibited significant mycelial inhibition (more than 70%) against M. fructigena, while remaining the last isolate displayed only a partial inhibition (up to 43%). Further, 12 of the bacteria isolates displayed an amylase production, 10 showed cellulase production, 11 revealed protease production, while only 2 displayed HCN production. In addition, most bacterial isolates were found to have genes encoding for different lipopeptides: bacillomycin (10), fengycin (3), iturin (11) and surfactin (1). Interestingly, two bacterial isolates, Bacillus amyloliquefaciens B10W10 and Pseudomonas sp. B11W11 were found to be the most effective and displayed the lowest disease severity in planta trial. These two bacteria reduced the brown rot incidence compared to the synthetic fungicide in a semi-commercial large-scale trial. Therefore, our findings suggest that these two later bacterial isolates provide apple protection against M. fructigena via direct and indirect mechanisms. These isolates may be used, therefore, as potential biological control agents (BCAs) in preventive treatment to control brown rot disease on apple fruits.
Note
None
CRAW tags
- AB - Utile à l'AB
- FREDO conservation des productions
- FREDO lutte
- FREDO santé végétale
- GEO France
- GEO Maroc
- apple
- pathogène
- protection
WEB tags
- m. fructigena
- antagonistic bacteria
- apple fruits
- biological control
- mechanisms
- postharvest
Titre de la publication
Agronomy
Volume
10
Pages
1814
Date caractères
2020/11
Date publication
24 novembre 2020
Doi
10.3390/agronomy10111814
Le DOI est une URL unique de référencement d'une publication.
Il est donc plus fiable et permanent qu'une URL classique
Url publication