INVESTIGADORES
DRAGHI Walter Omar
artículos
Título:
Genome mining of Burkholderia ambifaria strain T16, a rhizobacterium able to produce antimicrobial compounds and degrade the mycotoxin fusaric acid
Autor/es:
ALVAREZ, FLORENCIA; SIMONETTI, ESTER; DRAGHI, WALTER O.; VINACOUR, MATÍAS; PALUMBO, MIRANDA C.; DO PORTO, DARIO FERNÁNDEZ; MONTECCHIA, MARCELA S.; ROBERTS, IRMA N.; RUIZ, JIMENA A.
Revista:
WORLD JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY & BIOTECHNOLOGY
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Año: 2022 vol. 38
ISSN:
0959-3993
Resumen:
Burkholderia ambifaria T16 is a bacterium isolated from the rhizosphere of barley plants that showed a remarkable antifungal activity. This strain was also able to degrade fusaric acid (5-Butylpyridine-2-carboxylic acid) and detoxify this mycotoxin in inoculated barley seedlings. Genes and enzymes responsible for fusaric acid degradation have an important biotechnological potential in the control of fungal diseases caused by fusaric acid producers, or in the biodegradation/bio catalysis processes of pyridine derivatives. In this study, the complete genome of B. ambifaria T16 was sequenced and analyzed to identify genes involved in survival and competition in the rhizosphere, plant growth promotion, fungal growth inhibition, and degradation of aromatic compounds. The genomic analysis revealed the presence of several operons for the biosynthesis of antimicrobial compounds, such as pyrrolnitrin, ornibactin, occidiofungin and the membrane-associated AFC-BC11. These compounds were also detected in bacterial culture supernatants by mass spectrometry analysis. In addition, this strain has multiple genes contributing to its plant growth-promoting profile, including those for acetoin, 2,3-butanediol and indole-3-acetic acid production, siderophores biosynthesis, and solubilisation of organic and inorganic phosphate. A pan-genomic analysis demonstrated that the genome of strain T16 possesses large gene clusters that are absent in the genomes of B. ambifaria reference strains. According to predictions, most of these clusters would be involved in aromatic compounds degradation. One genomic region, encoding flavin-dependent monooxygenases of unknown function, is proposed as a candidate responsible for fusaric acid degradation.