The Effects of Gluconacin on Bacterial Tomato Pathogens and Protection against Xanthomonas perforans , the Causal Agent of Bacterial Spot Disease.
Elizabeth Teixeira de Almeida RamosFábio Lopes OlivaresLetícia Oliveira da RochaRogério Freire da SilvaMargarida Goréte Ferreira do CarmoMaria Teresa Gomes LopesCarlos Henrique Salvino Gadelha MenesesMarcia Soares VidalJosé Ivo BaldaniPublished in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
As agricultural practices become more sustainable, adopting more sustainable practices will become even more relevant. Searching for alternatives to chemical compounds has been the focus of numerous studies, and bacteriocins are tools with intrinsic biotechnological potential for controlling plant diseases. We continued to explore the biotechnological activity of the bacteriocin Gluconacin from Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus , PAL5 strain, by investigating this protein's antagonism against important tomato phytopathogens and demonstrating its effectiveness in reducing bacterial spots caused by Xanthomonas perforans . In addition to this pathogen, the bacteriocin Gluconacin demonstrated bactericidal activity in vitro against Ralstonia solanacearum and Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato , agents that cause bacterial wilt and bacterial spots, respectively. Bacterial spot control tests showed that Gluconacin reduced disease severity by more than 66%, highlighting the biotechnological value of this peptide in ecologically correct formulations.