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Iron Bound‐Siderophores, Cyanic Acid, and Antibiotics Involved in Suppression of <i>Thielaviopsis basicola</i> by a <i>Pseudomonas fluorescens</i> Strain
88
Citations
34
References
1986
Year
EngineeringFree IronBacteriologyMicrobial PhysiologyPlant PathologyBacterial PathogensMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyAntimicrobial ResistanceAerobic CulturingRhizosphereBiochemistryCyanic AcidPlant-microbe InteractionT. BasicolaMolecular MicrobiologyBiologyIron Bound‐siderophoresMicrobiologyMedicine
Abstract A Pseudomonas fluorescens strain (CHAo) involved in suppression of black root rot caused by Thielaviopsis basicola in the field, inhibited T. basicola when colonizing roots grown under sterile conditions or when grown on culture, media. Under these conditions it produced siderophores (iron chelating compounds), cyanic acid, and several antibiotics. Iron‐free siderophores inhibited neither the germination of endoconidia or chlamydospores nor the mycelial growth of T. basicola , but reduced the production of endoconidia. On the contrary, siderophores complexed with Fe 3+ strongly inhibited mycelium growth and spore germination; free iron was less toxic than iron‐bound siderophores. Therefore, contrary to what was believed to date, siderophores seem to be toxic not because they deplete iron but because they increase its concentration to the point where it becomes highly toxic. Cyanic acid and the antibiotics also inhibited the growth of T. basicola. Whetherall these compounds are involved in disease control in the soil remains, however, to be determined.
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