Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
Abstract
Erwinia carotovora
subsp.
betavasculorum
strains produced a bactericidal antibiotic in vitro that inhibited a wide spectrum of gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria. The optimum temperature for production was 24°C, and the addition of glycerol to culture media enhanced antibiotic production. Antibiotic production by these strains in the infection court of potato was the principal determinant enabling it to gain ascendancy over competing antibiotic-sensitive
Erwinia carotovora
subsp.
carotovora
strains. There was a complete correlation between antibiotic production by
E. carotovora
subsp.
betavasculorum
in vitro and inhibition of competing
E. carotovora
subsp.
carotovora
strains in planta. Inhibition of the latter by the former was apparent after 10 h of incubation in potato tuber wounds. Population densities of sensitive
E. carotovora
subsp.
carotovora
strains in mixed potato tuber infections with
E. carotovora
subsp.
betavasculorum
were approximately 10
6
-fold lower after 48 h of incubation than in corresponding single sensitive strain infections.
E. carotovora
subsp.
carotovora
were not inhibited in tuber infections that were incubated anaerobically. This correlated with the absence of antibiotic production during anaerobic incubation in vitro. Antibiotic-resistant strains of
E. carotovora
subsp.
carotovora
were not inhibited in planta or in vitro by
E. carotovora
subsp.
betavasculorum.
Moreover, isogenic antibiotic-negative (Ant
−
) mutant
E. carotovora
subsp.
betavasculorum
strains were not inhibitory to sensitive
E. carotovora
subsp.
carotovora
strains in tuber infections.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
34 articles.
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