2 resultados para Fungal studies

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill., Solanum lycopersicon L.) is one of the most popular vegetable throughout the world, and the importance of its cultivation is threatened by a wide array of pathogens. In the last twenty years this plant has been successfully used as a model plant to investigate the induction of defense pathways after exposure to fungal, bacterial and abiotic molecules, showing triggering of different mechanisms of resistance. Understanding these mechanisms in order to improve crop protection is a main goal for Plant Pathology. The aim of this study was to search for general or race-specific molecules able to determine in Solanum lycopersicon immune responses attributable to the main systems of plant defense: non-host, host-specific and induced resistance. Exopolysaccharides extracted by three fungal species (Aureobasidium pullulans, Cryphonectria parasitica and Epicoccum purpurascens), were able to induce transcription of pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins and accumulation of enzymes related to defense in tomato plants cv Money Maker,using the chemical inducer Bion® as a positive control. During the thesis, several Pseudomonas spp. strains were also isolated and tested for their antimicrobial activity and ability to produce antibiotics. Using as a positive control jasmonic acid, one of the selected strain was shown to induce a form of systemic resistance in tomato. Transcription of PRs and reduction of disease severity against the leaf pathogen Pseduomonas syringae pv. tomato was determined in tomato plants cv Money Maker and cv Perfect Peel, ensuring no direct contact between the selected rhizobacteria and the aerial part of the plant. To conclude this work, race-specific resistance of tomato against the leaf mold Cladosporium fulvum is also deepened, describing the project followed at the Phytopathology Laboratory of Wageningen (NL) in 2007, dealing with localization of a specific R-Avr interaction in transfected tomato protoplast cultures through fluorescence microscopy.

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Choosing natural enemies to suppress pest population has been for a long the key of biological control. Overtime the term biological control has also been applied to the use of suppressive soils, bio-disinfection and biopesticides. Biological control agents (BCA) and natural compounds, extracted or fermented from various sources, are the resources for containing phytopathogens. BCA can act through direct antagonism mechanisms or inducing hypovirulence of the pathogen. The first part of the thesis focused on mycoviruses infecting phytopathogenic fungi belonging to the genus Fusarium. The development of new approaches capable of faster dissecting the virome of filamentous fungi samples was performed. The semiconductor-based sequencer Ion Torrent™ and the nanopore-based sequencer MinION have been exploited to analyze DNA and RNA referable to viral genomes. Comparison with GeneBank accessions and sequence analysis allowed to identify more than 40 putative viral species, some of these mycovirus genera have been studied as inducers of hypovirulence in several phytopathogenic fungi, therefore future works will focus on the comparison of the morphology and physiology of the fungal strain infected and cured by the viruses identified and their possible use as a biocontrol agent. In a second part of the thesis the potential of botanical pesticides has been evaluated for the biocontrol of phloem limited phytopathogens such as phytoplasmas. The only active compounds able to control phytoplasmas are the antibiotic oxytetracyclines and in vitro direct and fast screening of new antimicrobials compounds on media is almost impossible due to the difficulty to culture phytoplasmas. For this reason, a simple and reliable screening method was developed to evaluate the effects of antimicrobials directly on phytoplasmas by an “ex-vivo” approach. Using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) in parallel with molecular tools (ddRT-PCR), the direct activity of tetracyclines on phytoplasma cells was verified, identifying also a promising compound showing similar activity.