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Jalal Soltani

Jalal Soltani

Academic rank: Associate Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 36053538800
HIndex:
Faculty: Faculty of Agriculture
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Phone:

Research

Title
Psychrophilic endophytic fungi with biological activity inhabit Cupressaceae plant family
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Psychrophilic endophytic fungi; Cold stress tolerance; Cupressaceae; Biological activity; Cupressus; Thuja
Year
2014
Journal SYMBIOSIS
DOI
Researchers Mahdieh S. Hosseyni Moghaddam1 ، Jalal Soltani

Abstract

Psychrophilic microorganisms are cold-adapted organisms that have an optimum growth temperature below 15 ºC, and often below 5 ºC. Endophytic microorganisms live inside healthy plants and biosynthesize an array of secondary metabolites which confer major ecological benefits to their host. We provide information, for the first time, on an endophytic association between bioactive psychrophilic fungi and trees in Cupressaceae plant family living in temperate to cold, semi-arid habitats. We have recovered psychrophilic endophytic fungi (PEF) from healthy foliar tissues of Cupressus arizonica, Cupressus sempervirens and Thuja orientalis (Cupressaceae, Coniferales). In total, 23 such fungi were found out of 110 endophytic fungal isolates. They were identified as ascomycetous fungi, more specifically Phoma herbarum, Phoma sp. and Dothideomycetes spp., all from Dothideomycetes. The optimal growth temperature for all these 23 fungal isolates was 4 ºC, and the PEF isolates were able to biosynthesize secondary metabolite at this temperature. Extracted metabolites from PEF showed significant antiproliferative/cytotoxic, antifungal and antibacterial effects against phytopathogenic fungi and bacteria. Of special interest was their antibacterial activity against the ice-nucleation active bacterium Pseudomonas syringae. Accordingly, we suggest that evergreen Cupressaceae plants may benefit from their psychrophilic endophytic fungi during cold stress. Whether such endosymbionts confer any ecological and evolutionary benefits to their host plants remains to be investigated in vivo.