4.7 Article

The Role of Pyoluteorin from Pseudomonas protegens Pf-5 in Suppressing the Growth and Pathogenicity of Pantoea ananatis on Maize

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23126431

Keywords

Pseudomonas protegens; Pantoea ananatis; pyoluteorin; orfamide; biofilm; biocontrol

Funding

  1. Korea-China cooperation research project (Development of rice multi-stress resistance green technologies and applications) [2022YFE0198100]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31972325, 32172490]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province (CN) [BK20201239]
  4. Special Fund for the Fundamental Research Funds for Central Universities [KYZ201708]

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The polyketide pyoluteorin isolated from the crude extract of Pf-5 can significantly suppress the growth of DZ-12 and has the potential to be developed as an antimicrobial agent.
The rhizospheric bacterium Pseudomonas protegens Pf-5 can colonize the seed and root surfaces of plants, and can protect them from pathogen infection. Secondary metabolites, including lipopeptides and polyketides produced by Pf-5, are involved in its biocontrol activity. We isolated a crude extract from Pf-5. It exhibited significant surface activity and strong antibacterial activity against Pantoea ananatis DZ-12, which causes maize brown rot on leaves. HPLC analysis combined with activity tests showed that the polyketide pyoluteorin in the crude extract participated in the suppression of DZ-12 growth, and that the lipopeptide orfamide A was the major biosurfactant in the crude extract. Further studies indicated that the pyoluteorin in the crude extract significantly suppressed the biofilm formation of DZ-12, and it induced the accumulation of reactive oxygen species in DZ-12 cells. Scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy observation revealed that the crude extract severely damaged the pathogen cells and caused cytoplasmic extravasations and hollowing of the cells. The pathogenicity of DZ-12 on maize leaves was significantly reduced by the crude extract from Pf-5 in a dose-dependent manner. The polyketide pyoluteorin had strong antibacterial activity against DZ-12, and it has the potential for development as an antimicrobial agent.

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