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A consortium of siderophore-producing bacterial strains from the rhizosphere of rice plants induces systemic resistance in rice against sheath blight disease

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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A consortium of siderophore-producing bacterial strains from the rhizosphere of rice plants induces systemic resistance in rice against sheath blight disease. / Naureen, Zakira; Hafeez, Fauzia; Roberts, Michael.
Aspects of Applied Biology. Vol. 98 ASSOCIATION OF APPLIED BIOLOGISTS, 2009. p. 17-19.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Naureen, Z, Hafeez, F & Roberts, M 2009, A consortium of siderophore-producing bacterial strains from the rhizosphere of rice plants induces systemic resistance in rice against sheath blight disease. in Aspects of Applied Biology. vol. 98, ASSOCIATION OF APPLIED BIOLOGISTS, pp. 17-19.

APA

Naureen, Z., Hafeez, F., & Roberts, M. (2009). A consortium of siderophore-producing bacterial strains from the rhizosphere of rice plants induces systemic resistance in rice against sheath blight disease. In Aspects of Applied Biology (Vol. 98, pp. 17-19). ASSOCIATION OF APPLIED BIOLOGISTS.

Vancouver

Naureen Z, Hafeez F, Roberts M. A consortium of siderophore-producing bacterial strains from the rhizosphere of rice plants induces systemic resistance in rice against sheath blight disease. In Aspects of Applied Biology. Vol. 98. ASSOCIATION OF APPLIED BIOLOGISTS. 2009. p. 17-19

Author

Naureen, Zakira ; Hafeez, Fauzia ; Roberts, Michael. / A consortium of siderophore-producing bacterial strains from the rhizosphere of rice plants induces systemic resistance in rice against sheath blight disease. Aspects of Applied Biology. Vol. 98 ASSOCIATION OF APPLIED BIOLOGISTS, 2009. pp. 17-19

Bibtex

@inproceedings{768ee8f75dab4afbae381892fdf92478,
title = "A consortium of siderophore-producing bacterial strains from the rhizosphere of rice plants induces systemic resistance in rice against sheath blight disease",
abstract = "Rice (Oryza sativa) is a major crop in much of the developing world where disease management using pesticides is not economically practical nor environmentally safe. The identification of biocontrol agents therefore presents a useful alternative. Here, we have screened bacterial strains isolated from the rhizosphere of rice plants, and identified a number of these that exhibit antagonistic activity towards the fungal pathogen, Rhizoctonia solani, the causative agent of rice sheath blight disease. Antagonism was strongly correlated with the quantity of siderophores produced by individual strains, and was increased under iron-limiting conditions. Selected high-siderophore-producing strains Bacillus subtilis SPS2, Bacillus cereus Z2-7, Enterobacter sp. SPR7 and Aeromonas hydrophilla BPS10 were found to promote the growth of rice plants, possibly via the solubilisation of soil phosphates, nitrogen fixation and the production of phytohormones. These same plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) also conferred resistance against sheath blight disease, which resulted in significant yield increases in infected plants. A consortium of these selected strains was especially effective in both growth promotion and disease suppression, and generally performed better than treatment with the fungicide, benlate. Molecular analysis indicated that the PGPR strains tested enhanced expression of chitinases, peroxidases and glucanases in rice, and may therefore activate induced systemic resistance in this plant species. Our work has identified a series of rhizobacterial strains able to promote growth and provide effective resistance against sheath blight disease in rice and which therefore have potential for application as biocontrol agents in agriculture.",
author = "Zakira Naureen and Fauzia Hafeez and Michael Roberts",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
isbn = "0265-1491",
volume = "98",
pages = "17--19",
booktitle = "Aspects of Applied Biology",
publisher = "ASSOCIATION OF APPLIED BIOLOGISTS",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - A consortium of siderophore-producing bacterial strains from the rhizosphere of rice plants induces systemic resistance in rice against sheath blight disease

AU - Naureen, Zakira

AU - Hafeez, Fauzia

AU - Roberts, Michael

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Rice (Oryza sativa) is a major crop in much of the developing world where disease management using pesticides is not economically practical nor environmentally safe. The identification of biocontrol agents therefore presents a useful alternative. Here, we have screened bacterial strains isolated from the rhizosphere of rice plants, and identified a number of these that exhibit antagonistic activity towards the fungal pathogen, Rhizoctonia solani, the causative agent of rice sheath blight disease. Antagonism was strongly correlated with the quantity of siderophores produced by individual strains, and was increased under iron-limiting conditions. Selected high-siderophore-producing strains Bacillus subtilis SPS2, Bacillus cereus Z2-7, Enterobacter sp. SPR7 and Aeromonas hydrophilla BPS10 were found to promote the growth of rice plants, possibly via the solubilisation of soil phosphates, nitrogen fixation and the production of phytohormones. These same plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) also conferred resistance against sheath blight disease, which resulted in significant yield increases in infected plants. A consortium of these selected strains was especially effective in both growth promotion and disease suppression, and generally performed better than treatment with the fungicide, benlate. Molecular analysis indicated that the PGPR strains tested enhanced expression of chitinases, peroxidases and glucanases in rice, and may therefore activate induced systemic resistance in this plant species. Our work has identified a series of rhizobacterial strains able to promote growth and provide effective resistance against sheath blight disease in rice and which therefore have potential for application as biocontrol agents in agriculture.

AB - Rice (Oryza sativa) is a major crop in much of the developing world where disease management using pesticides is not economically practical nor environmentally safe. The identification of biocontrol agents therefore presents a useful alternative. Here, we have screened bacterial strains isolated from the rhizosphere of rice plants, and identified a number of these that exhibit antagonistic activity towards the fungal pathogen, Rhizoctonia solani, the causative agent of rice sheath blight disease. Antagonism was strongly correlated with the quantity of siderophores produced by individual strains, and was increased under iron-limiting conditions. Selected high-siderophore-producing strains Bacillus subtilis SPS2, Bacillus cereus Z2-7, Enterobacter sp. SPR7 and Aeromonas hydrophilla BPS10 were found to promote the growth of rice plants, possibly via the solubilisation of soil phosphates, nitrogen fixation and the production of phytohormones. These same plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) also conferred resistance against sheath blight disease, which resulted in significant yield increases in infected plants. A consortium of these selected strains was especially effective in both growth promotion and disease suppression, and generally performed better than treatment with the fungicide, benlate. Molecular analysis indicated that the PGPR strains tested enhanced expression of chitinases, peroxidases and glucanases in rice, and may therefore activate induced systemic resistance in this plant species. Our work has identified a series of rhizobacterial strains able to promote growth and provide effective resistance against sheath blight disease in rice and which therefore have potential for application as biocontrol agents in agriculture.

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SN - 0265-1491

VL - 98

SP - 17

EP - 19

BT - Aspects of Applied Biology

PB - ASSOCIATION OF APPLIED BIOLOGISTS

ER -