Affiliation:
1. Cornell University, Department of Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology, 334 Plant Science Building, Ithaca, New York 14853
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Differential protection of plants by
Enterobacter cloacae
was studied by investigating early sensing and response behavior of
Pythium ultimum
sporangia toward seeds in the presence or absence of
E. cloacae
. Ten percent of
P. ultimum
sporangia were activated within the first 30 min of exposure to cucumber seeds. In contrast, 44% of the sporangia were activated as early as 15 min after exposure to corn seeds with over 80% sporangial activation by 30 min. Germ tubes emerged from sporangia after 2.5 and 1.0 h in the cucumber and corn spermospheres, respectively. Seed application of the wild-type strain of
E. cloacae
(EcCT-501R3) reduced sporangial activation by 45% in the cucumber spermosphere, whereas no reduction was observed in the corn spermosphere. Fatty acid transport and degradation mutants of
E. cloacae
(strains EcL1 and Ec31, respectively) did not reduce sporangial activation in either of the spermospheres. Although wild-type or mutant strains of
E. cloacae
failed to reduce seed colonization incidence, pathogen biomass on cucumber seeds was reduced in the presence of
E. cloacae
strains EcCT-501R3 and Ec31 by 4 and 8 h after sowing, respectively. By 12 h, levels of
P. ultimum
on cucumber seeds treated with
E. cloacae
EcCT-501R3 did not differ from levels on noninoculated seeds. On corn seeds,
P. ultimum
biomass was not affected by the presence of any
E. cloacae
strain. When introduced after sporangial activation had occurred,
E. cloacae
failed to reduce
P. ultimum
biomass on cucumber seeds compared with that on nontreated seeds. Also, increasing numbers of sporangia used to inoculate seeds yielded increased pathogen biomass at each sampling time. This indicates a direct link between the level of seed-colonizing biomass of
P. ultimum
and the number of activated and germinated sporangia in the spermosphere, suggesting that
E. cloacae
suppresses
P. ultimum
seed infections by reducing sporangial activation and germination within the first 30 to 90 min after sowing.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
19 articles.
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