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1.
Front Microbiol ; 13: 983781, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36246295

RESUMO

Biological control is an effective measure in the green control of rice diseases. To search for biocontrol agents with broad-spectrum and high efficiency against rice diseases, in this study, a strain of antagonistic bacterium BR-01 with strong inhibitory effect against various rice diseases was isolated from Bolbostemmatis Rhizoma by plate confrontation method. The strain was identified as Bacillus velezensis by morphological observation, physiological and biochemical identification, and molecular characterization by 16S rDNA and gyrB gene sequencing analysis. The confrontation test (dual culture) and Oxford cup assays demonstrated that B. velezensis BR-01 had strong antagonistic effects on Magnaporthe oryzae, Ustilaginoidea virens, Fusarium fujikuroi, Xanthomonas oryzae pv. Oryzicola, and Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae, the major rice pathogens. The genes encoding antimicrobial peptides (ituA, ituD, bmyB, bmyC, srfAA, fenB, fenD, bacA, and bacD) were found in B. velezensis BR-01 by PCR amplification with specific primers. B. velezensis BR-01 could produce protease, cellulase, ß-1,3-glucanase, chitinase, indoleacetic acid, siderophore, and 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC) deaminase, and might produce three lipopeptide antibiotics, surfactin, iturin, and fengycin based on Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) results. Furthermore, the plant assays showed that B. velezensis BR-01 had significant control effects on rice bacterial blight and bacterial leaf streak by pot experiments in greenhouse. In conclusion, B. velezensis BR-01 is a broad-spectrum antagonistic bacterium and has the potential as the ideal biocontrol agent in controlling multiple rice diseases with high efficiency.

2.
Front Microbiol ; 13: 867633, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35572630

RESUMO

Xanthomonas oryzae pv. textitoryzae (Xoo) is a causal agent of rice bacterial leaf blight (BLB), the major rice disease, which is seriously constraining rice production in Asia. The interaction between Xoo and rice is in a dynamic process, essentially the co-evolution. Tracking the occurrence of plant diseases and identifying the epidemic pathogens in time are critical to assessing the epidemic disease status and understanding the pathogen evolution. In 2020, the occurrences of rice BLB were spotted in many places of Guangxi, the major rice growing region in China. Two of the 2020-epidemic Xoo strains, namely, GXO20-01 and GXO20-06, were isolated from low land and high mountain paddies in Guangxi, respectively, and were demonstrated to be race R8 of Chinese Xoo strains, but with significantly different virulence on certain susceptible varieties of rice. The HiFi PacBio sequencing revealed that GXO20-01 and GXO20-06 share the highly syntenic genome structures and the major genome contents, but only differ in <10 genes, including one gene encoding for transcription activator-like effector (TALE). A phylogenomic analysis grouped GXO20-01 and GXO20-06 into the PX-A lineage, stood close to PXO563 and PXO71 strains, but stood away from the other Chinese Xoo strains; for example, the JL25 and YC11. A comparative genomic analysis revealed that the major pathogenicity/virulence genes are conserved in two, newly isolated Xoo strains and the other Xoo strains in PX-A lineage, including the majority genes for the TALomes. The genomic differences between the Xoo strains were pinpointed to a few tal genes, which were variable in both their numbers and sequences, even between GXO20-01 and GXO20-06, the two 2020-epidemic Xoo strains. The study further revealed the instability and variability of tal genes in Xoo and highlighted the utility of HiFi long-read sequencing in TALE analysis and pathogen tracking.

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