4.7 Article

Copper nanoparticles against benzimidazole-resistant Monilinia fructicola field isolates

Journal

PESTICIDE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 173, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.pestbp.2021.104796

Keywords

Benzimidazoles; Nano fungicides; Plant pathogens; Cu-NPs; CuO-NPs; Synergism

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Nano-fungicides are expected to be important in future plant disease management, with their unique properties such as broad antimicrobial action and increased effectiveness. Copper nanoparticles show significant inhibitory effects on Monilinia fructicola and can synergize with other drugs to enhance antifungal activity. Their mode of action may involve ATP-dependent metabolism and nanoparticle-induced mechanisms.
Nano-fungicides are expected to play an important role in future plant disease management. Their unique properties include a broad antimicrobial action, increased effectiveness in lower doses, slower a.i. release and/or enhanced drug delivery and an ability to control drug-resistant pathogens, which makes them appealing candidates for use as eco-friendly antifungal alternatives to counter fungicides resistance. Copper nanoparticles (Cu-NPs) could suppress mycelial growth in both sensitive (BEN?S) and resistant (BENR) Monilinia fructicola isolates harboring the E198A benzimidazole resistance mutation, more effectively than copper oxide NPs (CuO-NPs) and Cu(OH)2. A significant synergy of Cu-NPs with thiophanate methyl (TM) was observed against BEN-S isolates both in vitro and when applied on plum fruit suggesting enhanced availability or nanoparticle induced transformation of TM to carbendazim. ATP-dependent metabolism is probably involved in the mode of fungitoxic action of Cu-NPs as indicated by the synergy observed between Cu-NPs and the oxidative phosphorylation-uncoupler fluazinam (FM). Copper ion release contributed in the toxic action of Cu-NPs against M. fructicola, as indicated by synergism experiments with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), although the lack of correlation between nano and bulk/ionic copper forms indicate an additional nano-property mediated mechanism of fungitoxic action. Results suggested that Cu-NPs can be effectively used in future plant disease management as eco-friendly antifungal alternatives to counter fungicides resistance and reduce the environmental footprint of synthetic fungicides.

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