Antifungal potential of Bacillus vallismortis R2 against different phytopathogenic fungi

The cash crops grown in an agro-climatic region are prone to infection by various fungal pathogens. The use of chemical fungicides over the years has resulted in emergence of resistant fungal strains, thereby necessitating the development of effective and environmental friendly alternatives. The nat...

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Main Authors: Preet K. Kaur, Jaspal Kaur, Harvinder S. Saini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria 2015-06-01
Series:Spanish Journal of Agricultural Research
Subjects:
l
Online Access:http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/sjar/article/view/6620/2400
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spelling doaj-85e7f4baf8d046daa66476a7268f6c842020-11-24T21:40:47ZengInstituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y AlimentariaSpanish Journal of Agricultural Research1695-971X2171-92922015-06-01132e100410.5424/sjar/2015132-6620Antifungal potential of Bacillus vallismortis R2 against different phytopathogenic fungi Preet K. Kaur0Jaspal Kaur1Harvinder S. Saini2Guru Nanak Dev University, Department of Microbiology, Amritsar-143005, IndiaPunjab Agricultural University, Department of Plant Pathology, Ludhiana-144001, IndiaGuru Nanak Dev University, Department of Microbiology, Amritsar-143005, IndiaThe cash crops grown in an agro-climatic region are prone to infection by various fungal pathogens. The use of chemical fungicides over the years has resulted in emergence of resistant fungal strains, thereby necessitating the development of effective and environmental friendly alternatives. The natural antagonistic interactions among different microbial populations have been exploited as an eco-friendly approach for controlling fungal pathogens resistant to synthetic chemicals. Morphologically distinct bacterial cultures (150), isolated from rhizospheric soils of wheat, rice, onion and tomato plants were screened for their antifungal potential against seven phytopathogenic fungi prevalent in the State of Punjab (India). The bacterial isolate R2, identified as Bacillus vallismortis, supported more than 50% inhibition of different phytopathogenic fungi (Alternaria alternata, Rhizoctonia oryzae, Fusarium oxysporum, Fusarium moniliforme, Colletotrichum sp, Helminthosporium sp and Magnaporthe grisea)in dual culture plate assay. The thin layer chromatography based bio-autography of acid-precipitated biomolecules (APB) indicated the presence of more than one type of antifungal molecule, as evidenced from zones of inhibition against the respective fungal pathogen. The initial analytical studies indicated the presence of surfactin, iturin A and fengycin-like compounds in APB. The antifungal activity of whole cells and APB of isolate R2 was evaluated by light and scanning electron microscopy. The wheat grains treated with APB and exposed to spores of A. alternata showed resistance to the development of black point disease, thereby indicating the potential application of R2 and its biomolecules at field scale level. http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/sjar/article/view/6620/2400lrhizospheremicroscopyblack point diseaseAlternaria alternatabio-autographybiomolecules
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Preet K. Kaur
Jaspal Kaur
Harvinder S. Saini
spellingShingle Preet K. Kaur
Jaspal Kaur
Harvinder S. Saini
Antifungal potential of Bacillus vallismortis R2 against different phytopathogenic fungi
Spanish Journal of Agricultural Research
l
rhizosphere
microscopy
black point disease
Alternaria alternata
bio-autography
biomolecules
author_facet Preet K. Kaur
Jaspal Kaur
Harvinder S. Saini
author_sort Preet K. Kaur
title Antifungal potential of Bacillus vallismortis R2 against different phytopathogenic fungi
title_short Antifungal potential of Bacillus vallismortis R2 against different phytopathogenic fungi
title_full Antifungal potential of Bacillus vallismortis R2 against different phytopathogenic fungi
title_fullStr Antifungal potential of Bacillus vallismortis R2 against different phytopathogenic fungi
title_full_unstemmed Antifungal potential of Bacillus vallismortis R2 against different phytopathogenic fungi
title_sort antifungal potential of bacillus vallismortis r2 against different phytopathogenic fungi
publisher Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria
series Spanish Journal of Agricultural Research
issn 1695-971X
2171-9292
publishDate 2015-06-01
description The cash crops grown in an agro-climatic region are prone to infection by various fungal pathogens. The use of chemical fungicides over the years has resulted in emergence of resistant fungal strains, thereby necessitating the development of effective and environmental friendly alternatives. The natural antagonistic interactions among different microbial populations have been exploited as an eco-friendly approach for controlling fungal pathogens resistant to synthetic chemicals. Morphologically distinct bacterial cultures (150), isolated from rhizospheric soils of wheat, rice, onion and tomato plants were screened for their antifungal potential against seven phytopathogenic fungi prevalent in the State of Punjab (India). The bacterial isolate R2, identified as Bacillus vallismortis, supported more than 50% inhibition of different phytopathogenic fungi (Alternaria alternata, Rhizoctonia oryzae, Fusarium oxysporum, Fusarium moniliforme, Colletotrichum sp, Helminthosporium sp and Magnaporthe grisea)in dual culture plate assay. The thin layer chromatography based bio-autography of acid-precipitated biomolecules (APB) indicated the presence of more than one type of antifungal molecule, as evidenced from zones of inhibition against the respective fungal pathogen. The initial analytical studies indicated the presence of surfactin, iturin A and fengycin-like compounds in APB. The antifungal activity of whole cells and APB of isolate R2 was evaluated by light and scanning electron microscopy. The wheat grains treated with APB and exposed to spores of A. alternata showed resistance to the development of black point disease, thereby indicating the potential application of R2 and its biomolecules at field scale level.
topic l
rhizosphere
microscopy
black point disease
Alternaria alternata
bio-autography
biomolecules
url http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/sjar/article/view/6620/2400
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