Cook R J, Thomashow L S, Weller D M, Fujimoto D, Mazzola M, Bangera G, Kim D S
United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Root Disease and Biological Control Research, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-6430, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1995 May 9;92(10):4197-201. doi: 10.1073/pnas.92.10.4197.
Genetic resistance in plants to root diseases is rare, and agriculture depends instead on practices such as crop rotation and soil fumigation to control these diseases. "Induced suppression" is a natural phenomenon whereby a soil due to microbiological changes converts from conducive to suppressive to a soilborne pathogen during prolonged monoculture of the susceptible host. Our studies have focused on the wheat root disease "take-all," caused by the fungus Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici, and the role of bacteria in the wheat rhizosphere (rhizobacteria) in a well-documented induced suppression (take-all decline) that occurs in response to the disease and continued monoculture of wheat. The results summarized herein show that antibiotic production plays a significant role in both plant defense by and ecological competence of rhizobacteria. Production of phenazine and phloroglucinol antibiotics, as examples, account for most of the natural defense provided by fluorescent Pseudomonas strains isolated from among the diversity of rhizobacteria associated with take-all decline. There appear to be at least three levels of regulation of genes for antibiotic biosynthesis: environmental sensing, global regulation that ties antibiotic production to cellular metabolism, and regulatory loci linked to genes for pathway enzymes. Plant defense by rhizobacteria producing antibiotics on roots and as cohabitants with pathogens in infected tissues is analogous to defense by the plant's production of phytoalexins, even to the extent that an enzyme of the same chalcone/stilbene synthase family used to produce phytoalexins is used to produce 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol. The defense strategy favored by selection pressure imposed on plants by soilborne pathogens may well be the ability of plants to support and respond to rhizosphere microorganisms antagonistic to these pathogens.
植物对根部病害的遗传抗性很罕见,因此农业依赖于轮作和土壤熏蒸等措施来控制这些病害。“诱导抑制”是一种自然现象,在易感寄主长期连作期间,由于微生物变化,土壤会从有利于土传病原菌转变为抑制病原菌生长。我们的研究聚焦于由禾顶囊壳菌小麦变种引起的小麦根部病害“全蚀病”,以及小麦根际细菌(根际微生物)在因该病害和小麦连作而发生的、有充分记录的诱导抑制(全蚀病衰退)中的作用。本文总结的结果表明,抗生素生产在根际细菌的植物防御和生态竞争力中都起着重要作用。例如,吩嗪和间苯三酚抗生素的产生,占从与全蚀病衰退相关的根际微生物多样性中分离出的荧光假单胞菌菌株提供的大部分天然防御。抗生素生物合成基因似乎至少有三个调控水平:环境感知、将抗生素生产与细胞代谢联系起来的全局调控,以及与途径酶基因相连的调控位点。根际细菌在根部产生抗生素并与感染组织中的病原体共存时对植物的防御,类似于植物产生植保素的防御,甚至在用于产生植保素的同一查耳酮/芪合酶家族的一种酶也用于产生2,4 - 二乙酰间苯三酚的程度上也是如此。土壤传播病原体对植物施加的选择压力所青睐的防御策略,很可能是植物支持和响应与这些病原体拮抗的根际微生物的能力。