| Literature DB >> 28163700 |
Colin Buttimer1, Olivia McAuliffe2, R P Ross3, Colin Hill3, Jim O'Mahony1, Aidan Coffey1.
Abstract
Losses in crop yields due to disease need to be reduced in order to meet increasing global food demands associated with growth in the human population. There is a well-recognized need to develop new environmentally friendly control strategies to combat bacterial crop disease. Current control measures involving the use of traditional chemicals or antibiotics are losing their efficacy due to the natural development of bacterial resistance to these agents. In addition, there is an increasing awareness that their use is environmentally unfriendly. Bacteriophages, the viruses of bacteria, have received increased research interest in recent years as a realistic environmentally friendly means of controlling bacterial diseases. Their use presents a viable control measure for a number of destructive bacterial crop diseases, with some phage-based products already becoming available on the market. Phage biocontrol possesses advantages over chemical controls in that tailor-made phage cocktails can be adapted to target specific disease-causing bacteria. Unlike chemical control measures, phage mixtures can be easily adapted for bacterial resistance which may develop over time. In this review, we will examine the progress and challenges for phage-based disease biocontrol in food crops.Entities:
Keywords: bacteriophages; biocontrol; biopesticides; phytopathogens; plant diseases
Year: 2017 PMID: 28163700 PMCID: PMC5247434 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Summary of bacteriophage biocontrol experiments which have been conducted since the year 2000 to the present.
| Pathogen | Host | Disease | Information | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potato | Soft rot | Bioassays with phage ΦPD10.3 and ΦPD23.1 could reduce severity of soft rot of tubers by 80% on potato slices and 95% with whole tubers from a mixed pathogen infection. | ||
| Potato | Soft rot/Blackleg | Phage vB_DsoM_LIMEstone1 and vB_DsoM_LIMEstone2 reduced soft rot of inoculated tubers in bioassays and in field trials which produced a potato crop with higher yields. | ||
| Potato | Soft rot | Bioassays with phage ΦD1, ΦD2, ΦD3, ΦD4, ΦD5, ΦD7, ΦD9, ΦD10, ΦD11 could reduce incidence of soft rot by up to 30–70% on co-inoculated potato slices with pathogen and phage. | ||
| Potato | Common scab | Seed tubers treated with phage Φ | ||
| Tomato | Bacterial wilt | Tomato plants treated with phage ΦRSL1 showed no symptoms of bacterial wilt during the experimental period; whereas all untreated plants showed wilting 18 days post infection. | ||
| Tomato | Bacteria wilt | Simultaneous treatment of phage PE204 with | ||
| Tomato | Bacterial spot | Greenhouse experiments with formulated phage cocktails could reduce disease severity with formulated phage cocktails providing better protection in comparison to unformulated. A similar effect was found in three consecutive field trials. | ||
| Tomato | Bacterial spot | In field experiments phage treatment was comparable to disease control with copper-mancozeb. Combination of phage and plant activator (ASM) resulted in enhanced control. | ||
| Grapevines | Pierce’s Disease | |||
| Onion | Field trial showed that weekly and biweekly applications of phage could reduce disease severity, a result which was comparable to treatments of weekly applications of copper-mancozeb. | |||
| Lettuce | Soft rot | Green house trials showed that phage PP1 could significantly reduce disease development on lettuce plants. | ||
| Radish | Common scab | Phages Stsc1 and Stsc3 could prevent disease development by treating radish seedlings. Non-treated radishes had 30% less weight than negative control, with phage treated radishes having masses similar to negative control. | ||
| Grapefruit | Asiatic citrus canker | Five greenhouse experiments utilizing phage treatment could reduce disease severity by 59%. However, using a skim milk formulation of phage did not have increased disease control. Phage treatment was also capable of reducing disease occurrence in a citrus nursery. Control was less effective than copper-mancozeb. Combination did not give increased disease control. | ||
| Orange | Citrus bacterial spot | Phage treatments reduced citrus spot occurrence by 35 and 48% in two trials in commercial citrus nursery. Control was equal or less effective than copper-mancozeb. Combination did not give increased disease control | ||
| Leek | Bacterial blight | Specific bio-assays demonstrated the | ||
| Mushrooms | Brown blotch Disease | Surface of mushrooms were inoculated with pathogen. The formation of blotches was completely blocked by co-incubation of phages with pathogen. | ||
| Pear, apple trees | Fire blight | Phages ΦEa1337-26 and ΦEa 2345 reduced infection of detached pear tree blossoms by 84 and 96%, respectively, with |