9 research outputs found
The cell wall of Fusarium oxysporum
Sugar analysis of isolated cell walls from three formae speciales of Fusarium oxysporum showed that they contained not only glucose and (N-acetyl)-glucosamine, but also mannose, galactose, and uronic acids, presumably originating from cell wall glycoproteins. Cell wall glycoproteins accounted for 50-60% of the total mass of the wall. X-ray diffraction studies showed the presence of alpha-1,3-glucan in the alkali-soluble cell wall fraction and of beta-1,3-glucan and chitin in the alkali-insoluble fraction. Electron microscopy and lectin binding studies indicated that glycoproteins form an external layer covering an inner layer composed of chitin and glucan. (C) 1999 Academic Press
Suppressive biomasses and antagonist bacteria for an eco-compatible control of Verticillium dahliae on nursery-grown olive plants
Two organic amendments (OMW-M1 and OMW-M2), based on olive mill wastes
(OMWs) subjected to advanced processes of aerobic static storage or
composting, were tested for their suppressive activity against
Verticillium dahliae , the causal agent of olive Verticillium wilt.
OMW-M1 and OMW-M2 drastically inhibited the pathogen growth in vitro
and then were further tested in suppressive pot experiments. The
amendments, mixed at 15 % (v/v) with a nursery standard plant-growth
matrix, were tested alone or in combination with two biocontrol
bacteria ( Bacillus amyloliquefaciens and Burkholderia cepacia )
selected from suppressive soils. All mixtures were artificially
contaminated with V. dahliae microsclerotia (MS), the density of which
was periodically monitored by either a semi-selective medium or a
specific real-time Polymerase Chain Reaction technique. In plant-less
pot assays conducted in a growth chamber, OMW-M1 was the most effective
amendment, reducing V. dahliae MS density by 100 % after 90 days with
respect to the untreated control. In nursery experiments with
pot-growing olive plants, OMW-M1, particularly when combined with the
biocontrol bacteria, confirmed its strong suppressive activity reducing
up to 100 % the density of V. dahliae MS in the rhizosphere behaving
even better than a commercial biofungicide ( Trichoderma asperellum
TV1) used as a control. The best combined treatment also reduced plant
mortality and increased root and shoot extension. It is concluded that
organic amendments from stabilized olive mill by-products showed
positive agronomic and phytosanitary properties on pot-growing olive
plants and, particularly when enriched with biocontrol agents, they are
potentially suitable for use in sustainable agriculture