St. Paul, Minnesota
November 6, 2003
While the
medical community has been exploring the use of bacteriophages,
a form of virus that can be used to manage bacteria that have
become resistant to antibiotics, plant pathologists with the
American Phytopathological
Society (APS) now say that this same approach may also help
fight plant disease.
According
to Jason Gill, a phage researcher at the University of Guelph,
Guelph, Ontario, phages have been proposed as plant-pathogen
control agents in a process known as phage therapy -- the
application of phages to ecosystems to reduce the population
size of bacteria. "Phage could be explored as a biological
control agent -- the use of one organism to suppress another,"
said Gill.
Like
other methods of biological control, one advantage of phage
therapy is a reduction in the usage of chemical agents against
pest species, which, in the case of phage, means a reduction in
the usage of chemical antibiotics, said Gill. Another potential
benefit of phage therapy is that phages are generally quite
specific for their host bacterial species, and so can be
targeted towards harmful bacteria while leaving other,
potentially beneficial bacteria intact.
Phage
therapy has been used successfully against bacterial blotch of
mushrooms caused by Pseudomonas tolaasii. In studies notable for
the employment of phage host-range mutants, phage therapy has
also been employed against bacterial blight of geraniums and
bacterial spot of tomatoes, both caused by pathovars of
Xanthomonas campestris.
Though
seemingly effective in certain situations, it is likely that
phage therapy against bacterial plant pathogens will not prove
to be a magic bullet in all cases, said Gill. The natural
interactions between phages, bacteria, and plants are still not
well understood. While phages that attack pathogenic bacteria
can help improve plant health, other phages may attack the
bacteria that affect the root nodulation of plants such as
soybeans, which are necessary for normal plant growth.
The
positive and negative effects of using phages to fight plant
disease are the subjects of this month's APS feature article
that can be found on the APS website at
www.apsnet.org .
The American Phytopathological Society (APS) is a non-profit,
professional scientific organization dedicated to the study and
management of plant disease with 5,000 members worldwide. |