In vitro screening of the antifungal activity of plant extracts as fungicides against rice seed borne fungi

It is well known that some plants contain secondary plant compounds that are inhibitory to pathogenic fungi. These plant compounds have different structures and actions when compared with conventional fungicides that are used to control microbial growth and survival. The potential antifungal propert...

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Main Authors: P. Thobunluepop, E. Pawelzik, C. Jatisatienr, S. Vearasilp
Format: Book Series
Published: 2018
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/48823
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-488232018-08-16T01:57:47Z In vitro screening of the antifungal activity of plant extracts as fungicides against rice seed borne fungi P. Thobunluepop E. Pawelzik C. Jatisatienr S. Vearasilp Agricultural and Biological Sciences It is well known that some plants contain secondary plant compounds that are inhibitory to pathogenic fungi. These plant compounds have different structures and actions when compared with conventional fungicides that are used to control microbial growth and survival. The potential antifungal properties of plants is related to their ability to synthesize compounds by secondary metabolism. Several chemical compounds of relatively complex structure with antimicrobial activity have been studied. The antifungal activity of crude extracts of Acorus calamus L., Stemona curtisii HK. f., Stemona tuberose L;, Memmea siamensis Kost., Eugenia caryophyllus, and an eugenol essential oil were studied in vitro. To establish these antifungal properties, four species of rice seed borne fungi, Alternaria solani, Colletotrichum sp., Fusarium moniliforme, and Rhizoctonia solani were used as target organisms. The agar overlay technique and spore inhibition technique were employed for the determination of antifungal activity which were compared with untreated controls. The antifungal activity was lined up into a series from strong to low, as follows; most effective was eugenol > Eugenia caryophyllus > Acorus calamus Linn. > Stemona tuberosa L. > Mammea siamensis Kost. = Stemona curtisii Hk. f. For the mode of action, above eugenol, lysis of spores and inhibition of mycelial growth were detected. Microscopic analysis exhibited complete lysis of spores after 24h of incubation at a 1.00% (v/v) concentration. Moreover, at this concentration, eugenol completely inhibited mycelial growth after 96h incubation. Thus, it was concluded that eugenol was a promising antifungal agent candidate, showing strong antifungal activity against pathogenic fungi. Further study is required to determine whether it could be used in the management of plant pathogenic or seed borne fungi, with less phytotoxic effects on the plant, seed or on product quality. 2018-08-16T01:57:47Z 2018-08-16T01:57:47Z 2009-01-01 Book Series 05677572 2-s2.0-75649118159 10.17660/ActaHortic.2009.837.29 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=75649118159&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/48823
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Agricultural and Biological Sciences
spellingShingle Agricultural and Biological Sciences
P. Thobunluepop
E. Pawelzik
C. Jatisatienr
S. Vearasilp
In vitro screening of the antifungal activity of plant extracts as fungicides against rice seed borne fungi
description It is well known that some plants contain secondary plant compounds that are inhibitory to pathogenic fungi. These plant compounds have different structures and actions when compared with conventional fungicides that are used to control microbial growth and survival. The potential antifungal properties of plants is related to their ability to synthesize compounds by secondary metabolism. Several chemical compounds of relatively complex structure with antimicrobial activity have been studied. The antifungal activity of crude extracts of Acorus calamus L., Stemona curtisii HK. f., Stemona tuberose L;, Memmea siamensis Kost., Eugenia caryophyllus, and an eugenol essential oil were studied in vitro. To establish these antifungal properties, four species of rice seed borne fungi, Alternaria solani, Colletotrichum sp., Fusarium moniliforme, and Rhizoctonia solani were used as target organisms. The agar overlay technique and spore inhibition technique were employed for the determination of antifungal activity which were compared with untreated controls. The antifungal activity was lined up into a series from strong to low, as follows; most effective was eugenol > Eugenia caryophyllus > Acorus calamus Linn. > Stemona tuberosa L. > Mammea siamensis Kost. = Stemona curtisii Hk. f. For the mode of action, above eugenol, lysis of spores and inhibition of mycelial growth were detected. Microscopic analysis exhibited complete lysis of spores after 24h of incubation at a 1.00% (v/v) concentration. Moreover, at this concentration, eugenol completely inhibited mycelial growth after 96h incubation. Thus, it was concluded that eugenol was a promising antifungal agent candidate, showing strong antifungal activity against pathogenic fungi. Further study is required to determine whether it could be used in the management of plant pathogenic or seed borne fungi, with less phytotoxic effects on the plant, seed or on product quality.
format Book Series
author P. Thobunluepop
E. Pawelzik
C. Jatisatienr
S. Vearasilp
author_facet P. Thobunluepop
E. Pawelzik
C. Jatisatienr
S. Vearasilp
author_sort P. Thobunluepop
title In vitro screening of the antifungal activity of plant extracts as fungicides against rice seed borne fungi
title_short In vitro screening of the antifungal activity of plant extracts as fungicides against rice seed borne fungi
title_full In vitro screening of the antifungal activity of plant extracts as fungicides against rice seed borne fungi
title_fullStr In vitro screening of the antifungal activity of plant extracts as fungicides against rice seed borne fungi
title_full_unstemmed In vitro screening of the antifungal activity of plant extracts as fungicides against rice seed borne fungi
title_sort in vitro screening of the antifungal activity of plant extracts as fungicides against rice seed borne fungi
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=75649118159&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/48823
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