6533b856fe1ef96bd12b1db3
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Biological control of potato soft rot caused by Dickeya solani and the survival of bacterial antagonists under cold storage conditions
Riitta NissinenJ.m. Van Der WolfB. PeivasteganMinna PirhonenI. HadizadehAsko Hannukkalasubject
0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePectobacteriumPopulationBlacklegCold storageblacklegDickeyaPlant ScienceHorticultureSerratia plymuthica A3001 natural sciencesEndophytebakteeritBiointeractions and Plant Health03 medical and health sciencespopulation dynamicsGeneticsserratia plymuthica A30kasvitauditCultivarta414education2. Zero hungereducation.field_of_studybiologyta1183fungifood and beveragesta4111biology.organism_classificationTaqMan real-time PCRpopulaatiodynamiikkabiocontrol agentHorticulture030104 developmental biologymärkämätäDickeya solaniAgronomy and Crop Science010606 plant biology & botanybiologinen torjuntadescription
Dickeya and Pectobacterium are responsible for causing blackleg of plants and soft rot of tubers in storage and in the field, giving rise to losses in seed potato production. In an attempt to improve potato health, biocontrol activity of known and putative antagonists was screened using in vitro and in planta assays, followed by analysis of their persistence at various storage temperatures. Most antagonists had low survival on potato tuber surfaces at 4 °C. The population dynamics of the best low‐temperature tolerant strain and also the most efficient antagonist, Serratia plymuthica A30, along with Dickeya solani as target pathogen, was studied with TaqMan real‐time PCR throughout the storage period. Tubers of three potato cultivars were treated in the autumn with the antagonist and then inoculated with D. solani. Although the cell densities of both strains decreased during the storage period in inoculated tubers, the pathogen population was always lower in the presence of the antagonist. The treated tubers were planted in the field the following growing season to evaluate the efficiency of the bacterial antagonist for controlling disease incidence. The potato endophyte S. plymuthica A30 protected potato plants by reducing blackleg development on average by 58.5% and transmission to tuber progeny as latent infection by 47–75%. These results suggest that treatment of potato tubers with biocontrol agents after harvest can reduce the severity of soft rot disease during storage and affect the transmission of soft rot bacteria from mother tubers to progeny tubers during field cultivation. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-11-02 |