Microbial and biochemical basis of a Fusarium wilt-suppressive soil

Jae-Yul Cha(Gyeongsang National University), Sangjo Han(SK Group (South Korea)), Hee‐Jeon Hong(University of Cambridge), Hyunji Cho(Gyeongsang National University), Da‐Ran Kim(Gyeongsang National University), Youngho Kwon(Gyeongsang National University), Soon-Kyeong Kwon(Yonsei University), Max Crüsemann(Scripps Institution of Oceanography), Yong Bok Lee(Gyeongsang National University), Jihyun F. Kim(Yonsei University), Guri Giaever(University of British Columbia), Corey Nislow(University of British Columbia), Bradley S Moore(Scripps Institution of Oceanography), Linda S. Thomashow(Agricultural Research Service), David M. Weller(Agricultural Research Service), Youn-Sig Kwak(Gyeongsang National University)
The ISME Journal
June 9, 2015
Cited by 529Open Access
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Abstract

Crops lack genetic resistance to most necrotrophic pathogens. To compensate for this disadvantage, plants recruit antagonistic members of the soil microbiome to defend their roots against pathogens and other pests. The best examples of this microbially based defense of roots are observed in disease-suppressive soils in which suppressiveness is induced by continuously growing crops that are susceptible to a pathogen, but the molecular basis of most is poorly understood. Here we report the microbial characterization of a Korean soil with specific suppressiveness to Fusarium wilt of strawberry. In this soil, an attack on strawberry roots by Fusarium oxysporum results in a response by microbial defenders, of which members of the Actinobacteria appear to have a key role. We also identify Streptomyces genes responsible for the ribosomal synthesis of a novel heat-stable antifungal thiopeptide antibiotic inhibitory to F. oxysporum and the antibiotic's mode of action against fungal cell wall biosynthesis. Both classical- and community-oriented approaches were required to dissect this suppressive soil from the field to the molecular level, and the results highlight the role of natural antibiotics as weapons in the microbial warfare in the rhizosphere that is integral to plant health, vigor and development.


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