Mode of Action of Microbial Biological Control Agents Against Plant Diseases: Relevance Beyond Efficacy

Microbial biological control agents (MBCAs) are applied to crops for biological control of plant pathogens where they act via a range of modes of action. Some MBCAs interact with plants by inducing resistance or priming plants without any direct interaction with the targeted pathogen. Other MBCAs ac...

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Main Authors: Jürgen Köhl, Rogier Kolnaar, Willem J. Ravensberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2019.00845/full
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spelling doaj-e370ae01a40c4de39f6333a9940e69ab2020-11-25T00:42:00ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2019-07-011010.3389/fpls.2019.00845454982Mode of Action of Microbial Biological Control Agents Against Plant Diseases: Relevance Beyond EfficacyJürgen Köhl0Rogier Kolnaar1Willem J. Ravensberg2Wageningen Plant Research, Wageningen University & Research, Wageningen, NetherlandsLinge Agroconsultancy B.V., Oosterhout, NetherlandsKoppert Biological Systems, Berkel en Rodenrijs, NetherlandsMicrobial biological control agents (MBCAs) are applied to crops for biological control of plant pathogens where they act via a range of modes of action. Some MBCAs interact with plants by inducing resistance or priming plants without any direct interaction with the targeted pathogen. Other MBCAs act via nutrient competition or other mechanisms modulating the growth conditions for the pathogen. Antagonists acting through hyperparasitism and antibiosis are directly interfering with the pathogen. Such interactions are highly regulated cascades of metabolic events, often combining different modes of action. Compounds involved such as signaling compounds, enzymes and other interfering metabolites are produced in situ at low concentrations during interaction. The potential of microorganisms to produce such a compound in vitro does not necessarily correlate with their in situ antagonism. Understanding the mode of action of MBCAs is essential to achieve optimum disease control. Also understanding the mode of action is important to be able to characterize possible risks for humans or the environment and risks for resistance development against the MBCA. Preferences for certain modes of action for an envisaged application of a MBCA also have impact on the screening methods used to select new microbials. Screening of MBCAs in bioassays on plants or plant tissues has the advantage that MBCAs with multiple modes of action and their combinations potentially can be detected whereas simplified assays on nutrient media strongly bias the selection toward in vitro production of antimicrobial metabolites which may not be responsible for in situ antagonism. Risks assessments for MBCAs are relevant if they contain antimicrobial metabolites at effective concentration in the product. However, in most cases antimicrobial metabolites are produced by antagonists directly on the spot where the targeted organism is harmful. Such ubiquitous metabolites involved in natural, complex, highly regulated interactions between microbial cells and/or plants are not relevant for risk assessments. Currently, risks of microbial metabolites involved in antagonistic modes of action are often assessed similar to assessments of single molecule fungicides. The nature of the mode of action of antagonists requires a rethinking of data requirements for the registration of MBCAs.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2019.00845/fullbiological controlplant diseasesmode of actionantagonistrisk assessmentscreening
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jürgen Köhl
Rogier Kolnaar
Willem J. Ravensberg
spellingShingle Jürgen Köhl
Rogier Kolnaar
Willem J. Ravensberg
Mode of Action of Microbial Biological Control Agents Against Plant Diseases: Relevance Beyond Efficacy
Frontiers in Plant Science
biological control
plant diseases
mode of action
antagonist
risk assessment
screening
author_facet Jürgen Köhl
Rogier Kolnaar
Willem J. Ravensberg
author_sort Jürgen Köhl
title Mode of Action of Microbial Biological Control Agents Against Plant Diseases: Relevance Beyond Efficacy
title_short Mode of Action of Microbial Biological Control Agents Against Plant Diseases: Relevance Beyond Efficacy
title_full Mode of Action of Microbial Biological Control Agents Against Plant Diseases: Relevance Beyond Efficacy
title_fullStr Mode of Action of Microbial Biological Control Agents Against Plant Diseases: Relevance Beyond Efficacy
title_full_unstemmed Mode of Action of Microbial Biological Control Agents Against Plant Diseases: Relevance Beyond Efficacy
title_sort mode of action of microbial biological control agents against plant diseases: relevance beyond efficacy
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Microbial biological control agents (MBCAs) are applied to crops for biological control of plant pathogens where they act via a range of modes of action. Some MBCAs interact with plants by inducing resistance or priming plants without any direct interaction with the targeted pathogen. Other MBCAs act via nutrient competition or other mechanisms modulating the growth conditions for the pathogen. Antagonists acting through hyperparasitism and antibiosis are directly interfering with the pathogen. Such interactions are highly regulated cascades of metabolic events, often combining different modes of action. Compounds involved such as signaling compounds, enzymes and other interfering metabolites are produced in situ at low concentrations during interaction. The potential of microorganisms to produce such a compound in vitro does not necessarily correlate with their in situ antagonism. Understanding the mode of action of MBCAs is essential to achieve optimum disease control. Also understanding the mode of action is important to be able to characterize possible risks for humans or the environment and risks for resistance development against the MBCA. Preferences for certain modes of action for an envisaged application of a MBCA also have impact on the screening methods used to select new microbials. Screening of MBCAs in bioassays on plants or plant tissues has the advantage that MBCAs with multiple modes of action and their combinations potentially can be detected whereas simplified assays on nutrient media strongly bias the selection toward in vitro production of antimicrobial metabolites which may not be responsible for in situ antagonism. Risks assessments for MBCAs are relevant if they contain antimicrobial metabolites at effective concentration in the product. However, in most cases antimicrobial metabolites are produced by antagonists directly on the spot where the targeted organism is harmful. Such ubiquitous metabolites involved in natural, complex, highly regulated interactions between microbial cells and/or plants are not relevant for risk assessments. Currently, risks of microbial metabolites involved in antagonistic modes of action are often assessed similar to assessments of single molecule fungicides. The nature of the mode of action of antagonists requires a rethinking of data requirements for the registration of MBCAs.
topic biological control
plant diseases
mode of action
antagonist
risk assessment
screening
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2019.00845/full
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