Association of induced resistance of rhododendron seedlings with inoculation of Streptomyces sp. R-5 and treatment with actinomycin D and amphotericin B to the tissue-culture medium

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Abstract

Seedlings of rhododendron were treated by adding Streptomyces sp. strain R-5, actinomycin D and/or amphotericin B to the tissue-culture medium. HPLC analysis showed that all of the treated seedlings contained these antibiotics at concentrations higher than the suppressive levels to mycelial growth of Pestalotiopsis sydowiana, a major pathogen of rhododendron. Occurrence of disease caused by this fungus in the seedlings was suppressed by treatment of the medium surface with strain R-5, but not by treatment with these antibiotics, suggesting that growth of strain R-5, an antibiotic producer, could be essential for induction of disease resistance in tissue-cultured seedlings of rhododendron.

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Shimizu, M., Furumai, T., Igarashi, Y., Onaka, H., Nishimura, T., Yoshida, R., & Kunoh, H. (2001). Association of induced resistance of rhododendron seedlings with inoculation of Streptomyces sp. R-5 and treatment with actinomycin D and amphotericin B to the tissue-culture medium. Journal of Antibiotics, 54(6), 501–505. https://doi.org/10.7164/antibiotics.54.501

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