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Cited 28 time in webofscience Cited 38 time in scopus
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Root-associated microbes in sustainable agriculture: models, metabolites and mechanisms

Authors
Thomashow, Linda S.Kwak, Youn-SigWeller, David M.
Issue Date
Sep-2019
Publisher
JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
Keywords
plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria; microbial metabolites; endophyte; holobiont
Citation
PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, v.75, no.9, pp 2360 - 2367
Pages
8
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Volume
75
Number
9
Start Page
2360
End Page
2367
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/8775
DOI
10.1002/ps.5406
ISSN
1526-498X
1526-4998
Abstract
Since the discovery of penicillin in 1928 and throughout the 'age of antibiotics' from the 1940s until the 1980s, the detection of novel antibiotics was restricted by lack of knowledge about the distribution and ecology of antibiotic producers in nature. The discovery that a phenazine compound produced by Pseudomonas bacteria could suppress soilborne plant pathogens, and its recovery from rhizosphere soil in 1990, provided the first incontrovertible evidence that natural metabolites could control plant pathogens in the environment and opened a new era in biological control by root-associated rhizobacteria. More recently, the advent of genomics, the availability of highly sensitive bioanalytical instrumentation, and the discovery of protective endophytes have accelerated progress toward overcoming many of the impediments that until now have limited the exploitation of beneficial plant-associated microbes to enhance agricultural sustainability. Here, we present key developments that have established the importance of these microbes in the control of pathogens, discuss concepts resulting from the exploration of classical model systems, and highlight advances emerging from ongoing investigations. (c) 2019 Society of Chemical Industry
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Kwak, Youn Sig
대학원 (응용생명과학부)
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