| Literature DB >> 30594952 |
Oluwaseyi Samuel Olanrewaju1, Olubukola Oluranti Babalola2.
Abstract
With the impending increase of the world population by 2050, more activities have been directed toward the improvement of crop yield and a safe environment. The need for chemical-free agricultural practices is becoming eminent due to the effects of these chemicals on the environment and human health. Actinomycetes constitute a significant percentage of the soil microbial community. The Streptomyces genus, which is the most abundant and arguably the most important actinomycetes, is a good source of bioactive compounds, antibiotics, and extracellular enzymes. These genera have shown over time great potential in improving the future of agriculture. This review highlights and buttresses the agricultural importance of Streptomyces through its biocontrol and plant growth-promoting activities. These activities are highlighted and discussed in this review. Some biocontrol products from this genus are already being marketed while work is still ongoing on this productive genus. Compared to more focus on its biocontrol ability, less work has been done on it as a biofertilizer until recently. This genus is as efficient as a biofertilizer as it is as a biocontrol.Entities:
Keywords: Actinomycetes; Biocontrol; Biofertilizer; Streptomyces; Sustainable agriculture; VOCs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30594952 PMCID: PMC6394478 DOI: 10.1007/s00253-018-09577-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 0175-7598 Impact factor: 4.813
Biocontrol and plant growth-promoting activities of some PGPS
| PGPS | Elicited effects | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biocontrol activities |
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| Merriman et al. ( |
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| de Vasconcellos and Cardoso ( | ||
| Errakhi et al. ( | |||
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| Gholami et al. ( | ||
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| Azura et al. ( | |
| Al-Askar et al. ( | |||
| Kanini et al. ( | |||
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| Cheng et al. ( | ||
| Plant growth-promoting activities | Grapevine | Couillerot et al. ( | |
| Jarak et al. ( | |||
| Gopalakrishnan et al. ( | |||
| Javaid and Sultan ( | |||
| Pepper | Robles-Hernández et al. ( | ||
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| Wheat | Toumatia et al. ( | |
| Soybean | Doolotkeldieva et al. ( |
Some Streptomyces species, their gene clusters, metabolites, and functions of these metabolites
| Species | Gene clusters | Metabolites reported | Functions of metabolites | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Streptomycin biosynthetic genes | Streptomycin | Antibacterial | Lee et al. ( |
| Grixazone biosynthetic genes | Grixazone B | Produced as a parasiticide during low availability of phosphate | Arakawa ( | |
| A factor | Induces the production of other secondary metabolites | Fiebig et al. ( | ||
|
| Lankacidin biosynthetic genes | Lankacidin C | Antibacterial | Lu et al. ( |
| Lankamycin biosynthetic genes | Lankamycin | Antibacterial | Lu et al. ( | |
|
| Avermectin polyketide synthase | Avermectins | Antimicrobial | Cheng et al. ( |
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| herABCDEFG genes | Clavulanic acid | Antibacterial | Flores-Gallegos and Nava-Reyna ( |
| Cephamycin C | ||||
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| abeABCD; α-abeAgenes | Actinorhodin | Antibacterial | Čihák et al. ( |
| Prodiginines biosynthetic genes | Prodiginines | Antimalarial | ||
| Albaflavenone biosynthetic genes | Albaflavenone | Antibacterial | ||
| SCO7221 | Germicidin A | |||
|
| Chloramphenicol biosynthetic genes | Chloramphenicol | Antibacterial | Cytryn et al. ( |
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| Monensin biosynthetic genes | Monensin | Growth-promoting agent | AlMatar et al. ( |
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| Oxytetracycline biosynthetic genes | Tetracyclines | Antibacterial | Lee et al. ( |
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| Aureomycin | Antibacterial | Francis ( | |
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| Selamectin | Parasiticide | Selvakumar et al. ( | |
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| Geldanamycin biosynthetic genes | Geldanamycin | Antitumor | He et al. ( |