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Isolation and characterization of endophytic fungi having plant growth promotion traits that biosynthesizes bacosides and withanolides under in vitro conditions

Authors :
Abhishek Niranjan
Nem K. Ngpoore
Rakshapal Singh
Sudeep Tiwari
Sumit K. Soni
Aradhana Mishra
Purnima Singh
Source :
Brazilian Journal of Microbiology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Endophytes are regarded with immense potentials in terms of plant growth promoting (PGP) elicitors and mimicking secondary metabolites of medicinal importance. Here in the present study, we explored Bacopa monnieri plants to isolate, identify fungal endophytes with PGP elicitation potentials, and investigate secretion of secondary metabolites such as bacoside and withanolide content under in vitro conditions. Three fungal endophytes isolated (out of 40 saponin producing isolates) from leaves of B. monnieri were examined for in vitro biosynthesis of bacosides. On morphological, biochemical, and molecular identification (ITS gene sequencing), the isolated strains SUBL33, SUBL51, and SUBL206 were identified as Nigrospora oryzae (MH071153), Alternaria alternata (MH071155), and Aspergillus terreus (MH071154) respectively. Among these strains, SUBL33 produced highest quantity of Bacoside A3 (4093 μg mL−1), Jujubogenin isomer of Bacopasaponin C (65,339 μg mL−1), and Bacopasaponin C (1325 μg mL−1) while Bacopaside II (13,030 μg mL−1) was produced by SUBL51 maximally. Moreover, these aforementioned strains also produced detectable concentration of withanolides—Withaferrin A, Withanolide A (480 μg mL−1), and Withanolide B (1024 μg mL−1) respectively. However, Withanolide A was not detected in the secondary metabolites of strain SUBL51. To best of our knowledge, the present study is first reports of Nigrospora oryzae as an endophyte in B. monnieri with potentials of biosynthesis of economically important phytomolecules under in vitro conditions. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s42770-021-00586-0.

Details

ISSN :
16784405 and 15178382
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brazilian Journal of Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e304a472d9db4ac02131a26fa4363cb3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s42770-021-00586-0