4.6 Article

The Role of Surfactin Production by Bacillus velezensis on Colonization, Biofilm Formation on Tomato Root and Leaf Surfaces and Subsequent Protection (ISR) against Botrytis cinerea

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9112251

Keywords

colonization pattern; population density; surfactin production; ISR

Categories

Funding

  1. Regional Fund of Innovation for Competitiveness Coquimbo Region FIC-R, Chile [BIP 30127532, BIP 30403034]
  2. ANID Beca Doctorado Nacional Grant [21140504]

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Many aspects of the role of lipopeptides in bacterial interaction with plants are still unclear. The concentration of lipopeptides produced by a strain directly correlates with its ability to colonize plant surfaces and trigger induced systemic resistance (ISR). Multiple factors, such as environmental stressors or compensation mechanisms, may also influence a strain's ability to effectively colonize a plant surface.
Many aspects regarding the role of lipopeptides (LPs) in bacterial interaction with plants are not clear yet. Of particular interest is the LP family of surfactin, immunogenic molecules involved in induced systemic resistance (ISR) and the bacterial colonization of plant surfaces. We hypothesize that the concentration of surfactin produced by a strain correlates directly with its ability to colonize and persist on different plant surfaces, which conditions its capacity to trigger ISR. We used two Bacillus velezensis strains (BBC023 and BBC047), whose antagonistic potential in vitro is practically identical, but not on plant surfaces. The surfactin production of BBC047 is 1/3 higher than that of BBC023. Population density and SEM images revealed stable biofilms of BBC047 on leaves and roots, activating ISR on both plant surfaces. Despite its lower surfactin production, strain BBC023 assembled stable biofilms on roots and activated ISR. However, on leaves only isolated, unstructured populations were observed, which could not activate ISR. Thus, the ability of a strain to effectively colonize a plant surface is not only determined through its production of surfactin. Multiple aspects, such as environmental stressors or compensation mechanisms may influence the process. Finally, the importance of surfactin lies in its impacts on biofilm formation and stable colonization, which finally enables its activity as an elicitor of ISR.

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