Research in Plant Disease (Sep 2022)

Screening of Bacterial Antagonists to Develop an Effective Cocktail against Erwinia amylovora

  • Dong Hyuk Choi,
  • Hyun Ju Choi,
  • Yeon Ju Kim,
  • Yeon-Jeong Lim,
  • Ingyeong Lee,
  • Duck Hwan Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5423/RPD.2022.28.3.152
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 3
pp. 152 – 161

Abstract

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Several types of chemical bactericides have been used to control fire blight. However, their excessive usage leads to environmental deterioration. Therefore, several researchers have analyzed antagonistic microorganisms as promising, effective, and safe biological control agents (BCAs). The primary aim of this study was to screen for potential antagonistic bacteria that suppress Erwinia amylovora. Among the 45 isolates studied, 5 strains showed the largest inhibition zone against E. amylovora. 16S rRNA gene sequencing identified them as Bacillus amyloliquefaciens (KPB 15), B. stratosphericus (KPB 21), B. altitudinis (KPB 25), B. safensis (KPB 31), and B. subtilis (KPB 39). KPB 25 and 31 reduced the lesion size of fire blight by 50% in immature apple fruits, and did not show antagonism against each other. Therefore, KPB 25 and 31 were selected to develop an antagonistic mixture against fire blight. Although the mixture with KPB 25 and 31 showed a slightly increased ability to reduce lesion size on immature fruits, they did not exhibit a synergistic effect in reducing E. amylovora population compared to each strain alone. Nevertheless, we have identified these two strains as useful and novel BCAs against fire blight with additional benefits safety and potential in developing a mixture without loss of their activity, owing to the absence of antagonism against each other.

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