4.5 Review

Harnessing Chemical Ecology for Environment-Friendly Crop Protection

Journal

PHYTOPATHOLOGY
Volume 111, Issue 10, Pages 1697-1710

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PHYTO-01-21-0035-RVW

Keywords

biological control; biotechnology; disease control and pest management; ecology; genomics; metabolomics; microbiome; symbiosis

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Specialty Crop Multi-State Program [AM170200XXXXG006]
  2. USDA National Institute of Food & Agriculture and Federal Appropriations [PEN04655]
  3. Brian Pool Program of the National Research Foundation of the Republic of Korea [2019H1D3A2A01054562]
  4. Penn State Ecology Institute
  5. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service
  6. National Research Foundation of Korea [2019H1D3A2A01054562] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Heavy reliance on synthetic pesticides for crop protection is unsustainable, leading to a need for alternative strategies such as using beneficial microbes. A better understanding of factors influencing the efficacy of microbial agents is crucial for their large-scale application as pesticide alternatives. Research on diverse metabolites associated with plant health-related processes, apart from antibiotics, has not received sufficient attention and could provide valuable insights for developing novel crop protection strategies.
Heavy reliance on synthetic pesticides for crop protection has become increasingly unsustainable, calling for robust alternative strategies that do not degrade the environment and vital ecosystem services. There are numerous reports of successful disease control by various microbes used in small-scale trials. However, inconsistent efficacy has hampered their large-scale application. A better understanding of how beneficial microbes interact with plants, other microbes, and the environment and which factors affect disease control efficacy is crucial to deploy microbial agents as effective and reliable pesticide alternatives. Diverse metabolites produced by plants and microbes participate in pathogenesis and defense, regulate the growth and development of themselves and neighboring organisms, help maintain cellular homeostasis under various environmental conditions, and affect the assembly and activity of plant and soil microbiomes. However, research on the metabolites associated with plant health-related processes, except antibiotics, has not received adequate attention. This review highlights several classes of metabolites known or suspected to affect plant health, focusing on those associated with biocontrol and belowground plant-microbe and microbe-microbe interactions. The review also describes how new insights from systematic explorations of the diversity and mechanism of action of bioactive metabolites can be harnessed to develop novel crop protection strategies.

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