TY - JOUR
T1 - Spray application of nonpathogenic fusaria onto rice flowers controls bakanae disease (caused by Fusarium fujikuroi) in the next plant generation
AU - Saito, Hiroki
AU - Sasaki, Mai
AU - Nonaka, Yoko
AU - Tanaka, Jun
AU - Tokunaga, Tomomi
AU - Kato, Akihiro
AU - Thu Thuy, Tran Thi
AU - Le Van Vang, Van Vang
AU - Le Minh Tuong, Minh Tuong
AU - Kanematsu, Seiji
AU - Suzuki, Tomotaka
AU - Kurauchi, Kenichi
AU - Fujita, Naoko
AU - Teraoka, Tohru
AU - Komatsu, Ken
AU - Arie, Tsutomu
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors express their gratitude to T. Tsuge (Chubu University) and I. Imazaki (Tohoku Agricultural Research Center, NARO) for providing pII99 and to H. Tateishi and T. Eizuka (Kureha Corporation) for their gift of F. fujikuroi Miyagi 92-10. F. proliferatum a25 and a29 were isolated from rice that was imported from Vietnam with special permission from the Japanese Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (18Y-1038). This research was partly supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (number 24658039) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) and the Intellectual Property Highway and A-STEP from the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) to T.A. Nonpathogenic Fusarium commune W3 and W5 and the spray treatment method for applying the biocontrol agents to flowers to produce seed latently colonized by biocontrol agents have been patented in Japan (6241001), the Republic of Korea (10-1770656), Indonesia (IDP000052506), and the United States (10264796 B2).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Saito et al.
PY - 2021/1
Y1 - 2021/1
N2 - Bakanae disease, caused by Fusarium fujikuroi, is an economically important seed-borne disease of rice. F. fujikuroi is horizontally transmitted to rice flowers and vertically transmitted to the next generation via seeds. The fungus induces typical symptoms such as abnormal tissue elongation and etiolation. Sanitation of seed farms and seed disinfection are the only effective means to control bakanae disease at present; however, the efficacy of these methods is often insufficient. Therefore, alternative and innovative control methods are necessary. We developed a novel method for applying nonpathogenic fusaria as biocontrol agents by spraying spore suspensions onto rice flowers to reduce the incidence of seed-borne bakanae. We visualized the interaction between Fusarium commune W5, a nonpathogenic fusarium, and Fusarium fujikuroi using transformants expressing two different fluorescent proteins on/in rice plants. W5 inhibited hyphal extension of F. fujikuroi on/in rice flowers and seedlings, possibly by competing with the pathogen, and survived on/in rice seeds for at least 6 months. IMPORTANCE We demonstrated that a spray treatment of rice flowers with the spores of nonpathogenic fusaria mimicked the disease cycle of the seed-borne bakanae pathogen Fusarium fujikuroi and effectively suppressed the disease. Spray treatment of nonpathogenic fusaria reduced the degree of pathogen invasion of rice flowers and vertical transmission of the pathogen to the next plant generation via seeds, thereby controlling the bakanae disease. The most promising isolate, F. commune W5, colonized seeds and seedlings via treated flowers and successfully inhibited pathogen invasion, suggesting that competition with the pathogen was the mode of action. Seed-borne diseases are often controlled by seed treatment with chemical fungicides. Establishing an alternative method is a pressing issue from the perspectives of limiting fungicide resistance and increasing food security. This work provides a potential solution to these issues using a novel application technique to treat rice flowers with biocontrol agents.
AB - Bakanae disease, caused by Fusarium fujikuroi, is an economically important seed-borne disease of rice. F. fujikuroi is horizontally transmitted to rice flowers and vertically transmitted to the next generation via seeds. The fungus induces typical symptoms such as abnormal tissue elongation and etiolation. Sanitation of seed farms and seed disinfection are the only effective means to control bakanae disease at present; however, the efficacy of these methods is often insufficient. Therefore, alternative and innovative control methods are necessary. We developed a novel method for applying nonpathogenic fusaria as biocontrol agents by spraying spore suspensions onto rice flowers to reduce the incidence of seed-borne bakanae. We visualized the interaction between Fusarium commune W5, a nonpathogenic fusarium, and Fusarium fujikuroi using transformants expressing two different fluorescent proteins on/in rice plants. W5 inhibited hyphal extension of F. fujikuroi on/in rice flowers and seedlings, possibly by competing with the pathogen, and survived on/in rice seeds for at least 6 months. IMPORTANCE We demonstrated that a spray treatment of rice flowers with the spores of nonpathogenic fusaria mimicked the disease cycle of the seed-borne bakanae pathogen Fusarium fujikuroi and effectively suppressed the disease. Spray treatment of nonpathogenic fusaria reduced the degree of pathogen invasion of rice flowers and vertical transmission of the pathogen to the next plant generation via seeds, thereby controlling the bakanae disease. The most promising isolate, F. commune W5, colonized seeds and seedlings via treated flowers and successfully inhibited pathogen invasion, suggesting that competition with the pathogen was the mode of action. Seed-borne diseases are often controlled by seed treatment with chemical fungicides. Establishing an alternative method is a pressing issue from the perspectives of limiting fungicide resistance and increasing food security. This work provides a potential solution to these issues using a novel application technique to treat rice flowers with biocontrol agents.
KW - Bakanae disease
KW - Biocontrol
KW - Flower spraying
KW - Fusarium fujikuroi
KW - Nonpathogenic Fusarium commune
KW - Seed-borne
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UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85097721247&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1128/AEM.01959-20
DO - 10.1128/AEM.01959-20
M3 - Article
C2 - 33158893
AN - SCOPUS:85097721247
SN - 0099-2240
VL - 87
JO - Applied and environmental microbiology
JF - Applied and environmental microbiology
IS - 2
M1 - e01959-20
ER -