| Literature DB >> 29134389 |
Samaneh Jafari1,2, Seyed-Soheil Aghaei2, Hossein Afifi-Sabet1, Masoomeh Shams-Ghahfarokhi3, Zahra Jahanshiri1, Mohammadhassan Gholami-Shabani1, Seyedahmad Shafiei-Darabi4, Mehdi Razzaghi-Abyaneh5.
Abstract
In the present study, halophilic bacteria communities were explored in saline soils of Howze-Soltan playa in Iran with special attention to their biological activity against an aflatoxigenic Aspergillus parasiticus NRRL 2999. Halophilic bacteria were isolated from a total of 20 saline soils using specific culture media and identified by 16S rRNA sequencing in neighbor-joining tree analysis. Antifungal and antiaflatoxigenic activities of the bacteria were screened by a nor-mutant A. parasiticus NRRL 2999 using visual agar plate assay and confirmed by high-performance liquid chromatography. Among a total of 177 halophilic bacteria belonging to 11 genera, 121 isolates (68.3%) inhibited A. parasiticus growth and/or aflatoxin production. The most potent inhibitory bacteria of the genera Bacillus, Paenibacillus and Staphylococcus were distributed in three main phylogenetic clusters as evidenced by 16S rRNA sequence analysis. A. parasiticus growth was inhibited by 0.7-92.7%, while AFB1 and AFG1 productions were suppressed by 15.1-98.9 and 57.0-99.6%, respectively. Taken together, halophilic bacteria identified in this study may be considered as potential sources of novel bioactive metabolites as well as promising candidates to develop new biocontrol agents for managing toxigenic fungi growth and subsequent aflatoxin contamination of food and feed in practice.Entities:
Keywords: Aflatoxins; Antifungal activity; Aspergillus parasiticus; Halophilic bacteria; Howze-Soltan playa; Soil ecology
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29134389 DOI: 10.1007/s00792-017-0979-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Extremophiles ISSN: 1431-0651 Impact factor: 2.395