| Literature DB >> 30884857 |
Muhammad Fazle Rabbee1, Md Sarafat Ali2, Jinhee Choi3, Buyng Su Hwang4, Sang Chul Jeong5, Kwang-Hyun Baek6.
Abstract
Bacillus velezensis is an aerobic, gram-positive, endospore-forming bacterium that promotes plant growth. Numerous strains of this species have been reported to suppress the growth of microbial pathogens, including bacteria, fungi, and nematodes. Based on recent phylogenetic analysis, several Bacillus species have been reclassified as B. velezensis. However, this information has yet to be integrated into a well-organized resource. Genomic analysis has revealed that B. velezensis possesses strain-specific clusters of genes related to the biosynthesis of secondary metabolites, which play significant roles in both pathogen suppression and plant growth promotion. More specifically, B. velezensis exhibits a high genetic capacity for synthesizing cyclic lipopeptides (i.e., surfactin, bacillomycin-D, fengycin, and bacillibactin) and polyketides (i.e., macrolactin, bacillaene, and difficidin). Secondary metabolites produced by B. velezensis can also trigger induced systemic resistance in plants, a process by which plants defend themselves against recurrent attacks by virulent microorganisms. This is the first study to integrate previously published information about the Bacillus species, newly reclassified as B. velezensis, and their beneficial metabolites (i.e., siderophore, bacteriocins, and volatile organic compounds).Entities:
Keywords: Bacillus velezensis; bioactive compound; induced systemic resistance; volatile organic compound
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30884857 PMCID: PMC6470737 DOI: 10.3390/molecules24061046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Bacillus velezensis is the conspecific species integrating B. amyloliquefaciens subsp. plantarum and B. methylotrophicus (adapted by Dunlap et al. [22]). The significance of the numbers are explained at the bottom of the same column.
Figure 2Phylogenetic tree constructed from the rpoB gene sequences of type strains of species from the “B. subtilis species complex” by the neighbor-joining method (using MEGA software). Bootstrap values (%) are given at the nodes obtained by repeating the analysis 1000 times. The scale bar indicates 0.02 nucleotide substitutions per nucleotide position.
Figure 3Molecular structure of ribosomal and nonribosomal bioactive compounds synthesized by B. velezensis.
Genes and gene clusters encoding for the secondary metabolites in B. velezensis.
| Metabolite | Genes and gene clusters | Enzyme | Size (kb) | Functions | Controlling Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nonribosomal synthesis of lipopeptides (LP) | ||||||
| Surfactin |
| NRPS | 32.0 | Biofilm, Induction of ISR | Fungi | [ |
| Fengycin |
| NRPS | 38.2 | Induction of ISR | Fungi | [ |
| Bacillomycin-D |
| NRPS/PKS | 39.7 | Induction of ISR | Fungi | [ |
| Bacillibactin |
| NRPS | 12.8 | Siderophore production | Microbial competitors | [ |
| Nonribosomal synthesis of polyketides (PK) | ||||||
| Difficidin |
| NRPS | 71.1 | Direct suppression | Bacteria | [ |
| Bacillaene | PKS/NRPS | 74.3 | Direct suppression | Bacteria | [ | |
| Macrolactin |
| NRPS | 53.9 | Direct suppression | Bacteria | [ |
| Nonribosomal synthesis of dipeptide antibiotics | ||||||
| Bacilysin |
| NRPS | 6.9 | Direct suppression | Bacteria, Cyanobacteria | [ |
| Ribosomal synthesis of bacteriocins | ||||||
| Plantazolicin |
| - | 9.96 | Direct suppression | Bacteria, Nematodes | [ |
| Amylocyclicin |
| - | 4.49 | Direct suppression | Bacteria | [ |
| Synthesis of VOCs | ||||||
| Acetoin and 2,3-butandiol |
| Acetolactate synthase/decarboxylase and 2,3-butanediol dehydrogenase | 3.6 | Induction of ISR | Bacteria, Fungi | [ |
NRPS = nonribosomal peptide synthetases; PKS = polyketide synthases; ISR = induced systemic resistance; VOCs: volatile organic compounds.
List of various bioactive metabolites synthesized by B. velezensis and the closely related species.
| Bioactive Metabolites | References | |
|---|---|---|
|
| Amylocyclicin, Bacilysin, Bacillomycin-D, Bacillibactin, Bacillaene, Difficidin, Fengycin, Macrolactin, Plantazolicin, Surfactin | [ |
|
| Bacillibactin, Bacillaene, Bacilysin, Difficidin, Bacitracin, Fengycin, Locillomycin, Subtilosin, Surfactin | [ |
|
| Bacillibactin, Bacillaene, Bacillomycin-D, Bacilysin, Fengycin, Surfactin | [ |
|
| Bacillomycin-D, Bacillaene, Difficidin, Fengycin, Surfactin | [ |
|
| Bacitracin, Lichenysin, Lichenin | [ |
|
| Amicoumacin, Bacilysin, Bacircine, Pumilacidin | [ |
Figure 4Signal transduction pathway of induced systemic resistance stimulated by B. velezensis. NPR1: non-expressor of PR1; JA/ET: the jasmonic acid/ethylene signaling pathways; SA: Salicylic Acid.