Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://digitalrepository.fccollege.edu.pk/handle/123456789/489
Title: Role of secondary metabolites in the interaction between Pseudomonas fluorescens and soil microorganisms under iron-limited conditions
Authors: Mehnaz, Samina
Deveau, Aurelie
Gross, Harald
Palin, B´eatrice
Schnepf, Max
Leblond, Pierre
Dorrestein, Pieter C.
Aigle, Bertrand
Keywords: Biological Sciences
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Oxford-FEMS
Abstract: Microorganisms can be versatile in their interactions with each other, being variously beneficial, neutral or antagonistic in their effect. Although this versatility has been observed among many microorganisms and in many environments, little is known regarding the mechanisms leading to these changes in behavior. In the present work, we analyzed the mechanism by which the soil bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens BBc6R8 shifts from stimulating the growth of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Laccaria bicolor S238N to killing the fungus. We show that among the three secondary metabolites produced by the bacterial strain—the siderophores enantio-pyochelin and pyoverdine, and the biosurfactant viscosin—the siderophores are mainly responsible for the antagonistic activity of the bacterium under iron-limited conditions. While the bacterial strain continues to produce beneficial factors, their effects are overridden by the action of their siderophores. This antagonistic activity of the strain P. fluorescens BBC6R8 in iron-depleted environments is not restricted to its influence on L. bicolor, since it was also seen to inhibit the growth of the actinomycete Streptomyces ambofaciens ATCC23877. We show that the strain P. fluorescens BBc6R8 uses different strategies to acquire iron, depending on certain biotic and abiotic factors.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/489
Appears in Collections:School of Life Sciences

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