Abstract :
The interaction between endophytic biocontrol agent
Chaetomium spirale ND35 and the soil-borne plant
pathogen Rhizoctonia solani was studied by light microscopy
and transmission electron microscopy (TEM),
as well as further investigated by gold cytochemistry
to assess the potential role of cell wall degrading
enzymes (CWDEs) during the mycoparasitic process.
Macroscopic observations of fungal growth in dual
cultures revealed that pathogen growth inhibition
occurred soon after contact with the antagonist, followed
by the overgrowth of C. spirale on the colony
of R. solani. The coiling of C. spirale around R. solani
and intracellular growth of the antagonist in its host
occurred frequently. Moreover, in advanced stage of
interaction between the antagonist and the pathogen,
The growth and development of C. spirale were associated
with highly morphological changes of the host
fungal cell, characterized by retraction of plasma
membrane and cytoplasm disorganization. Further,
TEM investigations through localization by gold immunocytochemistry
showed that contact between the
two fungi was mediated by an amorphous b-1,3-glucan-
enriched matrix originating from cell wall of the
antagonist C. spirale and sticking to its host surface.
At the same time, the hemispherical wall appositions
which were intensely labeled by the antibodies of b-1,
3-glucan in cell wall of R. solani were induced to form
at sites of potential antagonist entry. However, the
antagonist was capable of penetrating this barrier,
indicating that b-1,3-glucanases were produced during
the mycoparasitic process. Localization of N-acetylglucosamine
residues (chitin) with the gold-labelled
wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) implicated that chitinases
might be involved in the CWD of R. solani in
this antagonistic process as well. This report is the
first evidence about mechanisms of the interactions
between C. spirale and R. solani in ultrastructural and
cytochemical aspects.
Keywords :
mycoparasitism , Rhizoctonia solani , Chaetomium spirale , ultrastructure , gold cytochemistry