Inhibition of Fungal Growth and Induction of a Novel Volatilome in Response to Chromobacterium vaccinii Volatile Organic Compounds
The study of chemical bioactivity in the rhizosphere has recently broadened to include microbial metabolites, and their roles in niche construction and competition via growth promotion, growth inhibition, and toxicity. Several prior studies have identified bacteria that produce volatile organic comp...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Frontiers in microbiology 2020-05, Vol.11, p.1035-1035 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The study of chemical bioactivity in the rhizosphere has recently broadened to include microbial metabolites, and their roles in niche construction and competition via growth promotion, growth inhibition, and toxicity. Several prior studies have identified bacteria that produce volatile organic compounds (VOCs) with antifungal activities, indicating their potential use as biocontrol organisms to suppress phytopathogenic fungi and reduce agricultural losses. We sought to expand the roster of soil bacteria with known antifungal VOCs by testing bacterial isolates from wild and cultivated cranberry bog soils for VOCs that inhibit the growth of four common fungal and oomycete plant pathogens, and
Trichoderma
sp. Twenty one of the screened isolates inhibited the growth of at least one fungus by the production of VOCs, and isolates of
Chromobacterium vaccinii
had broad antifungal VOC activity, with growth inhibition over 90% for some fungi. Fungi exposed to
C. vaccinii
VOCs had extensive morphological abnormalities such as swollen hyphal cells, vacuolar depositions, and cell wall alterations. Quorum-insensitive
cviR
−
mutants of
C. vaccinii
were significantly less fungistatic, indicating a role for quorum regulation in the production of antifungal VOCs. We collected and characterized VOCs from co-cultivation assays of
Phoma
sp. exposed to wild-type
C. vaccinii
MWU328, and its
cviR
−
mutant using stir bar sorptive extraction and comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography—time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SBSE-GC × GC-TOFMS). We detected 53 VOCs that differ significantly in abundance between microbial cultures and media controls, including four candidate quorum-regulated fungistatic VOCs produced by
C. vaccinii
. Importantly, the metabolomes of the bacterial-fungal co-cultures were not the sum of the monoculture VOCs, an emergent property of their VOC-mediated interactions. These data suggest semiochemical feedback loops between microbes that have co-evolved for sensing and responding to exogenous VOCs. |
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ISSN: | 1664-302X 1664-302X |
DOI: | 10.3389/fmicb.2020.01035 |