4.5 Article

A statistical protocol to describe differences among nutrient utilization patterns of Fusarium spp. and Trichoderma gamsii

Journal

PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 70, Issue 5, Pages 1146-1157

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ppa.13362

Keywords

Bayesian generalized additive models; Biolog phenotype microarray system; functional clustering; fungal nutrient utilization; Fusarium head blight

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This study analyzed the nutritional competitive potential of different fungi and the behavior of natural competitors and biocontrol agents based on data collected by the Biolog PM system. The proposed protocol can be applied to various fungal phenotypical studies and provides important information for biocontrol strategies by comparing the nutritional patterns of single isolates with other fungi.
The Biolog phenotype microarrays (PM) system offers a simple and cheap tool to rapidly provide a high throughput of information about the phenotypes of fungal isolates in a short time. In order to improve the use of the PM system in fungal ecology studies, the present work proposes a new statistical protocol based on two approaches, that is, a functional principal components analysis to describe similarity patterns of growth curves, and a Bayesian generalized additive model (GAM) to allow inferences on specific growth features, in order to analyse nutrient fungal utilization in a model system including four causal agents of Fusarium head blight, the natural competitor Fusarium oxysporum, and the beneficial isolate Trichoderma gamsii T6085. Analysis of data collected by the Biolog PM in our biological system showed a different nutritional competitive potential of the four pathogens, as well as an intermediate behaviour of the natural competitor and of our biocontrol agent. This protocol, applicable to different fungal phenotypical studies at both isolate and community level, allows a full exploitation of data obtained by the PM system and provides important information about the nutritional pattern of a single isolate compared to those of other fungi, a key factor to be exploited in biocontrol strategies.

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