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A Plant Stress-Responsive Bioreporter Coupled With Transcriptomic Analysis Allows Rapid Screening for Biocontrols of Necrotrophic Fungal Pathogens

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Specialty Biology
Date 2021 Sep 20
PMID 34540894
Citations 3
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Abstract

are soil-borne Actinobacteria known to produce a wide range of enzymes, phytohormones, and metabolites including antifungal compounds, making these microbes fitting for use as biocontrol agents in agriculture. In this study, a plant reporter gene construct comprising the biotic stress-responsive glutathione S-transferase promoter GSTF7 linked to a luciferase output (GSTF7:luc) was used to screen a collection of Actinobacteria candidates for manipulation of plant biotic stress responses and their potential as biocontrol agents. We identified a isolate (KB001) as a strong candidate and demonstrated successful protection against two necrotrophic fungal pathogens, and , but not against a bacterial pathogen (). Treatment of Arabidopsis plants with either KB001 microbial culture or its secreted compounds induced a range of stress and defense response-related genes like pathogenesis-related (PR) and hormone signaling pathways. Global transcriptomic analysis showed that both treatments shared highly induced expression of reactive oxygen species and auxin signaling pathways at 6 and 24 h posttreatment, while some other responses were treatment specific. This study demonstrates that GSTF7 is a suitable marker for the rapid and preliminary screening of beneficial bacteria and selection of candidates with potential for application as biocontrols in agriculture, including the KB001 that was characterized here, and could provide protection against necrotrophic fungal pathogens.

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