Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.103, No.11, 4605-4621, 2019
Nanomaterials for the control of bacterial blight disease in pomegranate: quo vadis?
Bacterial blight, caused by Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. punicae, Xap is a serious threat to commercially successful pomegranate (Punica granatum L) crop. Owing to the non-availability of disease-resistant varieties of pomegranate, integrated disease management involving change of season, adequate nutrition, and preventive sprays of bactericides is used to control Xap. We undertook a systematic study to assess the efficacy of metal-based nanomaterials (Cu, CuO, ZnO, CaO, MgO) for the control of Xap. The antimicrobial effectiveness was in the order Cu>ZnO>MgO>CuO with MIC (minimum inhibitory concentration) 2.5, 20, 190, 200, and 1600g/ml. A time-to-kill curve indicated that Cu nanoparticles (CuNPs) killed Xap cells within 30min at 2.5g/ml. Under controlled conditions (polyhouse), foliar application of CuNPs (400g/ml) resulted in similar to 90 and similar to 15% disease reduction in 6-month-old infected plants at early (disease severity 10%) and established (disease severity 40%) stages of infection, respectively. In a subsequent field study on severely infected 7-year-old plants, applications of nanoparticles reduced the disease incidence by similar to 20% as compared to untreated control. Microscopic observations revealed that CuNPs reduced the bacterial colonization of the leaf surface. Anti-Xap activity of foliar applied CuNPs was on par with conventionally used copper oxychloride (3000g/ml) albeit at 8-fold reduced copper concentration. Thus, early disease detection and application of effective dosage of copper nanoparticles can indeed help the farmer in achieving rapid infection control. Further studies on use of combinations of nanoparticles for management of bacterial blight are warranted.
Keywords:Xanthomonas axonopodis pv;Punicae;Antimicrobial nanomaterials;Copper nanoparticles;Foliar application