Involvement of Burkholderiaceae and sulfurous volatiles in disease-suppressive soils
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Carrión Bravo, Víctor José
Cordovez, Viviane
Tyc, Olaf
Etalo, Desalegn W
de Bruijn, Irene
de Jager, Victor CL
Medema, Marnix
Eberl, Leo
Raaijmakers, Jos M
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Oxford University Press
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Disease-suppressive soils are ecosystems in which plants suffer less from root infections due to the activities of specific
microbial consortia. The characteristics of soils suppressive to specific fungal root pathogens are comparable to those of
adaptive immunity in animals, as reported by Raaijmakers and Mazzola (Science 352:1392–3, 2016), but the mechanisms
and microbial species involved in the soil suppressiveness are largely unknown. Previous taxonomic and metatranscriptome
analyses of a soil suppressive to the fungal root pathogen Rhizoctonia solani revealed that members of the Burkholderiaceae
family were more abundant and more active in suppressive than in non-suppressive soils. Here, isolation, phylogeny, and
soil bioassays revealed a significant disease-suppressive activity for representative isolates of Burkholderia pyrrocinia,
Paraburkholderia caledonica, P. graminis, P. hospita, and P. terricola. In vitro antifungal activity was only observed for
P. graminis. Comparative genomics and metabolite profiling further showed that the antifungal activity of P. graminis PHS1
was associated with the production of sulfurous volatile compounds encoded by genes not found in the other four genera.
Site-directed mutagenesis of two of these genes, encoding a dimethyl sulfoxide reductase and a cysteine desulfurase, resulted
in a loss of antifungal activity both in vitro and in situ. These results indicate that specific members of the Burkholderiaceae
family contribute to soil suppressiveness via the production of sulfurous volatile compounds.
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