Reply of microbial populations leading the growth in roots and induced systemic resistance

Authors

  • Hayron Fabricio Canchignia Martínez Universidad Técnica Estatal de Quevedo
  • Carlos Belezaca Pinargote Universidad Técnica Estatal de Quevedo
  • Maria Peñafiel Jaramillo Universidad Técnica Estatal de Quevedo
  • Mercedes Susana Carranza Patiño Universidad Técnica Estatal de Quevedo
  • Oscar Prieto Benavides Universidad Técnica Estatal de Quevedo
  • Ramiro Gaibor Fernández Universidad Técnica Estatal de Quevedo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18779/cyt.v8i2.150

Keywords:

RHIZOBACTERIA, TRYPTOPHAN, PATHOGEN DEFENSE MECHANISM

Abstract

Rhizobacteria are an alternative that has proven not to generate resistance in pathogens. Pseudomonas strains play an important role in biocontrol, because they provide a great variety of bioactive compounds to control plant pathogens. The information search   focused on the study of Pseudomonas spp isolates which have the ability to diminish the viability of such pathogens as: fungi, bacteria, nematodes through the use of an antagonist mechanism inducing plant defense systems through systemic acquired resistance (SAR) and induced systemic resistance (ISR) activating the pre-alert state on the ground before and after being subjected to the pathogenic agent. The RSI for the dependent route to jasmonate (JA) and ethylene (ET) is activated.

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Published

2016-01-05

How to Cite

Canchignia Martínez, H. F., Pinargote, C. B., Peñafiel Jaramillo, M., Carranza Patiño, M. S., Prieto Benavides, O., & Gaibor Fernández, R. (2016). Reply of microbial populations leading the growth in roots and induced systemic resistance. Ciencia Y Tecnología, 8(2), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.18779/cyt.v8i2.150

Issue

Section

Ciencias agrarias