4.6 Article

Coculture of Trichoderma harzianum and Bacillus velezensis Based on Metabolic Cross-Feeding Modulates Lipopeptide Production

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10051059

Keywords

Bacillus velezensis; Trichoderma harzianum; microbial interaction; coculture; nutritional dependency; nitrogen; lipopeptides

Categories

Funding

  1. INTERREG VWallonie
  2. France Vlaanderen
  3. Walloon Region
  4. Alibiotech
  5. Hauts-deFrance region

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This study investigates the compatibility of the fungus Trichoderma harzianum and the bacterium Bacillus velezensis in different liquid coculture conditions. The results show that in a simplified medium with nitrate as the sole nitrogen source, the two microorganisms are able to establish a cooperative relationship and grow together.
Cocultures have been widely explored for their use in deciphering microbial interaction and its impact on the metabolisms of the interacting microorganisms. In this work, we investigate, in different liquid coculture conditions, the compatibility of two microorganisms with the potential for the biocontrol of plant diseases: the fungus Trichoderma harzianum IHEM5437 and the bacterium Bacillus velezensis GA1 (a strong antifungal lipopeptide producing strain). While the Bacillus overgrew the Trichoderma in a rich medium due to its antifungal lipopeptide production, a drastically different trend was observed in a medium in which a nitrogen nutritional dependency was imposed. Indeed, in this minimum medium containing nitrate as the sole nitrogen source, cooperation between the bacterium and the fungus was established. This is reflected by the growth of both species as well as the inhibition of the expression of Bacillus genes encoding lipopeptide synthetases. Interestingly, the growth of the bacterium in the minimum medium was enabled by the amendment of the culture by the fungal supernatant, which, in this case, ensures a high production yield of lipopeptides. These results highlight, for the first time, that Trichoderma harzianum and Bacillus velezensis are able, in specific environmental conditions, to adapt their metabolisms in order to grow together.

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