4.7 Article

Jania adhaerens Primes Tomato Seed against Soil-Borne Pathogens

Journal

HORTICULTURAE
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/horticulturae8080746

Keywords

biological control; Jania adhaerens; water-soluble polysaccharides; seed priming; soil-borne pathogens; plant-induced resistance; tomato; FT-IR

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Agricultural, Food, Forestry and Tourism Policies (MiPAAFT) under the DIBIO-BIOPRIME project [DM N. 3400]
  2. Interreg MAC Program [MAC2/1.1b/269: REBECA-CCT]

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The study demonstrated that seed priming with Jania adhaerens water-soluble polysaccharides (JA WSPs) can protect tomato plants from soil-borne pathogens and promote plant growth. Results showed that WSPs increased seedling emergence, reduced disease severity, and enhanced plant development.
Managing soil-borne pathogens is complex due to the restriction of the most effective synthetic fungicides for soil treatment. In this study, we showed that seed priming with Jania adhaerens water-soluble polysaccharides (JA WSPs) was successful in protecting tomato plants from the soil-borne pathogens Rhizoctonia solani, Pythium ultimum, and Fusarium oxysporum under greenhouse conditions. WSPs were extracted from dry thallus by autoclave-assisted method, and the main functional groups were characterized by using FT-IR spectroscopy. WSPs were applied by seed treatment at 0.3, 0.6 and 1.2 mg/mL doses, and each pathogen was inoculated singly in a growing substrate before seeding/transplant. Overall, WSPs increased seedling emergence, reduced disease severity and increased plant development depending on the dose. Transcriptional expression of genes related to phenylpropanoid, chlorogenic acid, SAR and ISR pathways, and chitinase and beta-1,3 glucanase activities were investigated. Among the studied genes, HQT, HCT, and PR1 were significantly upregulated depending on the dose, while all doses increased PAL and PR2 expression as well as beta-1,3 glucanase activity. These results demonstrated that, besides their plant growth promotion activity, JA WSPs may play a protective role in triggering plant defense responses potentially correlated to disease control against soil-borne pathogens.

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