Nature Communications (Jan 2018)
Cooperative interactions between seed-borne bacterial and air-borne fungal pathogens on rice
- Boknam Jung,
- Jungwook Park,
- Namgyu Kim,
- Taiying Li,
- Soyeon Kim,
- Laura E. Bartley,
- Jinnyun Kim,
- Inyoung Kim,
- Yoonhee Kang,
- Kihoon Yun,
- Younghae Choi,
- Hyun-Hee Lee,
- Sungyeon Ji,
- Kwang Sik Lee,
- Bo Yeon Kim,
- Jong Cheol Shon,
- Won Cheol Kim,
- Kwang-Hyeon Liu,
- Dahye Yoon,
- Suhkman Kim,
- Young-Su Seo,
- Jungkwan Lee
Affiliations
- Boknam Jung
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- Jungwook Park
- Department of Microbiology, Pusan National University
- Namgyu Kim
- Department of Microbiology, Pusan National University
- Taiying Li
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- Soyeon Kim
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- Laura E. Bartley
- Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology, University of Oklahoma
- Jinnyun Kim
- Department of Microbiology, Pusan National University
- Inyoung Kim
- Department of Microbiology, Pusan National University
- Yoonhee Kang
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- Kihoon Yun
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- Younghae Choi
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- Hyun-Hee Lee
- Department of Microbiology, Pusan National University
- Sungyeon Ji
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- Kwang Sik Lee
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- Bo Yeon Kim
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- Jong Cheol Shon
- BK21 Plus KNU Multi-Omics-Based Creative Drug Research Team, College of Pharmacy and Research Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyungpook National University
- Won Cheol Kim
- BK21 Plus KNU Multi-Omics-Based Creative Drug Research Team, College of Pharmacy and Research Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyungpook National University
- Kwang-Hyeon Liu
- BK21 Plus KNU Multi-Omics-Based Creative Drug Research Team, College of Pharmacy and Research Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyungpook National University
- Dahye Yoon
- Department of Chemistry and Chemistry Institute for Functional Materials, Pusan National University
- Suhkman Kim
- Department of Chemistry and Chemistry Institute for Functional Materials, Pusan National University
- Young-Su Seo
- Department of Microbiology, Pusan National University
- Jungkwan Lee
- Department of Applied Biology, Dong-A University
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02430-2
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 9,
no. 1
pp. 1 – 11
Abstract
Interactions between bacteria and fungi are common and contribute to ecosystem processes. Here, Jung et al. show that the interaction between two plant pathogens (a seed-borne bacterium and an air-borne fungus) promotes their own survival and dispersal, as well as disease progression on rice plants.