Affiliation:
1. Departments of Plant Pathology
2. Nematology, University of California, Riverside, California 92521
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The goal of this study was to identify bacteria involved in soil suppressiveness against the plant-parasitic nematode
Heterodera schachtii
. Since
H. schachtii
cysts isolated from the suppressive soil can transfer this beneficial property to nonsuppressive soils, analysis of the cyst-associated microorganisms should lead to the identification of the causal organisms. Our experimental approach was to identify bacterial rRNA genes (rDNA) associated with
H. schachtii
cysts obtained from soil mixtures with various levels of suppressiveness. We hypothesized that we would be able to identify bacteria involved in the suppressiveness by correlating population shifts with differing levels of suppressiveness. Soil treatments containing different amounts of suppressive and fumigation-induced nonsuppressive soils exhibited various levels of suppressiveness after two nematode generations. The 10%-suppressive-soil treatment contained numbers of eggs per gram of soil similar to those of the 100%-suppressive-soil treatment, indicating that the suppressive factor(s) had been transferred. Bacterial rDNA associated with
H. schachtii
cysts were identified using a culture-independent method termed oligonucleotide fingerprinting of rRNA genes. Bacteria from five major taxonomic groups (
Actinobacteria
,
Cytophaga-Flexibacter-Bacteroides
, α-
Proteobacteria
, β-
Proteobacteria
, and γ-
Proteobacteria
) were identified. Three bacterial rDNA groups contained clones that were more prevalent in the highly suppressive soil treatments than in the less suppressive treatments, indicating a potential involvement in the
H. schachtii
suppressiveness. When these three groups were examined with specific PCR analyses performed on
H. schachtii
cysts that developed in soils treated with three biocidal compounds, only one bacterial rDNA group with moderate to high sequence identity to rDNA from several
Rhizobium
species and uncultured α-proteobacterial clones was consistently associated with the highly suppressive treatments. A quantitative PCR analysis confirmed the association of this
Rhizobium
-like rDNA group with the
H. schachtii
suppressiveness.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Reference28 articles.
1. Baker K. F. and R. J. Cook. 1974. Biological control of plant pathogens. Freeman San Francisco Calif.
2. Baldwin J. G. and M. Mundo-Ocampo. 1991. Heteroderinae cysts and non-cyst-forming nematodes p. 275-362. In W. R. Nickle (ed.) Manual of agricultural nematology. Marcel Dekker New York N.Y.
3. Becker, J. O., H. D. Ohr, N. M. Grech, and M. E. Sims. 1998. Evaluation of methyl iodide as a soil fumigant in container and small field plot studies. Pestic. Sci.52:58-62.
4. Brown, G., R. K. Callow, C. D. Green, F. G. W. Jones, J. H. Rayner, A. M. Shephed, and T. D. Williams. 1971. The structure, composition and origin of the sub-crystalline layer in some species of the genus Heterodera. Nematologica17:590-599.
5. Caswell, E. P., I. J. Thomason, and H. E. McKinney. 1985. Extraction of cysts and eggs of Heterodera schachtii from soil with an assessment of extraction efficiency. J. Nematol.17:337-340.
Cited by
34 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献