Plant hairy roots enable high throughput identification of antimicrobials against Candidatus Liberibacter spp.

Author:

Irigoyen SoniaORCID,Ramasamy Manikandan,Pant Shankar,Niraula Prakash,Bedre Renesh,Gurung Meena,Rossi Denise,Laughlin Corinne,Gorman ZacharyORCID,Achor Diann,Levy Amit,Kolomiets Michael V.,Sétamou Mamoudou,Badillo-Vargas Ismael E.,Avila Carlos A.ORCID,Irey Michael S.,Mandadi Kranthi K.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractA major bottleneck in identifying therapies to control citrus greening and other devastating plant diseases caused by fastidious pathogens is our inability to culture the pathogens in defined media or axenic cultures. As such, conventional approaches for antimicrobial evaluation (genetic or chemical) rely on time-consuming, low-throughput and inherently variable whole-plant assays. Here, we report that plant hairy roots support the growth of fastidious pathogens like Candidatus Liberibacter spp., the presumptive causal agents of citrus greening, potato zebra chip and tomato vein greening diseases. Importantly, we leverage the microbial hairy roots for rapid, reproducible efficacy screening of multiple therapies. We identify six antimicrobial peptides, two plant immune regulators and eight chemicals which inhibit Candidatus Liberibacter spp. in plant tissues. The antimicrobials, either singly or in combination, can be used as near- and long-term therapies to control citrus greening, potato zebra chip and tomato vein greening diseases.

Funder

Texas A&M AgriLife Research Insect-Vectored Disease Seed Grant

Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research

United States Department of Agriculture | National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

Reference103 articles.

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