Biological Control of Verticillium Wilt on Olive Trees by the Salt-Tolerant Strain Bacillus velezensis XT1
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Castro, David; Torres, Marta; Sampedro Quesada, María Inmaculada; Martínez-Checa Barrero, Fernando José; Béjar Luque, María VictoriaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Biocontrol Antifungal activity Crop protection Bacillus velezensis Verticillium dahliae Olea europaea
Date
2020-07-20Referencia bibliográfica
Castro, D., Torres, M., Sampedro, I., Martínez-Checa, F., Torres, B., & Béjar, V. (2020). Biological Control of Verticillium Wilt on Olive Trees by the Salt-Tolerant Strain Bacillus velezensis XT1. Microorganisms, 8(7), 1080. [doi:10.3390/microorganisms8071080]
Sponsorship
Xtrem Biotech S.L; European Union SME Instrument XTOnE-774657; Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness SNEO-20161037E; Spanish Government CGL2011-25748; Spanish Ministry of Industry, Trade and Tourism (project VertiSOLUTION); Ramon y Cajal program from the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness RYC-2014-15532; CEI-BioTic grant of the BioTic Campus of International Excellence CAEP2-46; Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness DI-14-06868Abstract
Verticillium wilt, caused by the pathogen Verticillium dahliae, is extremely devastating to
olive trees (Olea europea). Currently, no successful control measure is available against it. The objective
of this work was to evaluate the antifungal activity of Bacillus velezensis XT1, a well-characterized
salt-tolerant biocontrol strain, against the highly virulent defoliating V. dahliae V024. In vitro, strain
XT1 showed to reduce fungal mycelium from 34 to 100%, depending on if the assay was conducted with
the supernatant, volatile compounds, lipopeptides or whole bacterial culture. In preventive treatments,
when applied directly on young olive trees, it reduced Verticillium incidence rate and percentage
of severity by 54 and ~80%, respectively. It increased polyphenol oxidase (PPO) activity by 395%,
indicating an enhancement of disease resistance in plant tissues, and it decreased by 20.2% the number
of fungal microsclerotia in soil. In adult infected trees, palliative inoculation of strain XT1 in the soil
resulted in a reduction in Verticillium symptom severity by ~63%. Strain XT1 is biosafe, stable in soil
and able to colonize olive roots endophytically. All the traits described above make B. velezensis XT1
a promising alternative to be used in agriculture for the management of Verticillium wilt.