Endophytes may have potential future applications in agriculture. Use of endophytes might potentially increase
crop yields. Turfgrass seed of
Festuca and
Lolium perenne infected with fungal
inoculants,
Acremonium coenophialum and
A. lolii, is commercially available for use in growing lawns which might require less pesticide use -the grasses are poisonous to cattle and more resistant to some insect damage. As of 1999 this is only available in the afore-mentioned lawn grasses, which are sold as 'low maintenance'
cultivars. The fungi cause the grasses to contain toxic
alkaloids. The products provide high resistance to foliar lawn pests such as billbugs, chinch bugs, sod webworms, fall army-worms and Argentine stem weevils, but offer little protection to pests of grass roots such as grubs. The endophytes can survive most pesticides and are even resistant to some
fungicides, and are very suitable for use in
Integrated Pest Management.
Biofuel A 2008 experiment with an isolate of a fungus called NRRL 50072 found that this strain can produce a small amount of fuel-like hydrocarbon compounds which was promoted as "myco-diesel". It was hoped that perhaps in the future this might provide a possible source of
biofuel. It was first misidentified as the endophyte
Gliocladium roseum, but later research showed that it was in fact the
saprophyte Ascocoryne sarcoides. A strain of endophytic fungi which appeared to be closely related to
Nigrograna mackinnonii which was isolated from a stem of the plant
Guazuma ulmifolia collected in Ecuador was found to produce a variety of
volatile organic compounds including
terpenes and odd chain
polyenes. The polyenes isolated from the fungus have properties that are sought in
gasoline-surrogate biofuels.
Phytoremediation Phytoremediation is an environmentally sustainable process where plants potentially able to break down or sequester, or stimulate micro-organisms in the soil to break down or sequester, certain organic pollutants and inorganic pollutants such as
nickel in degraded ecosystems. In this endophytes may possibly assist plants in converting pollutants into less biologically harmful forms; in one of the few experiments performed a
plasmid called TOM from a strain of a bacterium in the
Burkholderia genus known as G4 which can break down
trichloroethylene (TCE) was transferred to endophytes of
popular trees; although it did not help the plants remove more of this chemical than non-inoculated plants, the plants transpired less TCE into the air. In another experiment
Burkholderia bacteria with both the TOM plasmid as well as nickel resistance genes was inoculated into
yellow lupine; this increased the root mass of the plants, but the amounts of TCE transpired was not
statistically significant. Despite these failures, such techniques might lead to some future improvements. Two strains of the endophytic fungi
Pestalotiopsis microspora isolated from stems of plants from the Ecuadorian rainforest were shown in laboratory experiments to be able to digest
polyurethane plastic as the fungus's sole carbon source in
anaerobic conditions, although many other non-endophytic fungi have demonstrated this ability, and most isolates of endophytic fungi in this experiment could perform this to some degree.
Drug discovery Endophytes produce a wide variety of
secondary metabolites that might be useful as lead compounds in
drug discovery. Endophyte
bioprospecting has already yielded compounds with
antibacterial,
antifungal,
antiviral,
neuroprotective, A well known example of the discovery of chemicals derived from endophytic fungi is from the fungus
Taxomyces andreanae isolated from the pacific yew
Taxus brevifolia.
T. andreanae produces
paclitaxel, also known as taxol. This drug is important for the treatment of cancer. Other endophytes since have been discovered that also produce paclitaxel in other host species, but to date there has been no successful industrial source of paclitaxel created. Two fusarubin derivatives: anhydrofusarubin and methyl ether of fusarubin were isolated from endophytic fungus
Cladosporium sp. and have shown
cytotoxicity against human
leukemia (K-562). Also, compounds from the
marine fungus Nigrospora sp. have activity against strains of multi drug-resistant
Mycobacterium tuberculosis. An endophytic fungus of the genus
Pseudomassaria has been found in the rainforest of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. This fungus yields a metabolite that shows potential as an antidiabetic, also known as an insulin mimetic. This compound acts like insulin and has been shown to lower blood glucose levels in mouse model experiments.
Epichloë endophytes are being widely used commercially in turf grasses to enhance the performance of the turf and its resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses.
Piriformospora indica is an interesting endophytic fungus of the order
Sebacinales, the fungus is capable of colonising roots and forming symbiotic relationship with many plants. Endophytes appear to enhance the growth of their plant host symbionts. Endophytes also provide their hosts with an increased resilience to both abiotic and biotic stressors such as drought, poor soils and herbivory. The increased growth and resilience is likely caused by the endophytes ability to improve plant nutrition or secondary metabolite production, as in the case of
Phoma eupatoriis inhibition of the phytopathogen
Phytophthora infestans. Endophytes accomplish this by increasing the uptake of valuable land limited nutrients from the soil such as phosphorus and making other plant nutrients available to plants such as
rock phosphate and atmospheric nitrogen which are normally trapped in forms that are inaccessible to plants. Increasingly there has been great importance placed on endophytes that protect valuable crops from invasive insects. One example of an endophyte-plant-insect interaction is located in the New Zealand grasslands, where endophytes, known as AR1 and AR37 are utilized to protect valuable ryegrass from the
Argentine stem weevil but remain palatable to another important food source, livestock. There are several endophytes that have been discovered that exhibit insecticidal properties. One such endophyte comes from the
Nodulisporium sp. which was first harvested from the plant
Bontia daphnoides. Indole
diterpenes, known as nodulisporic acids, have been harvested from this endophyte which have effective insecticidal properties against the blowfly larvae. There are many obstacles to successfully implementing the use of endophytes in agriculture. Despite the many known benefits that endophytes may confer to their plant hosts,
conventional agricultural practices continue to take priority. Current agriculture relies heavily on fungicides and high levels of chemical fertilizers. The use of fungicides has a negative effect on endophytic fungi and fertilizers reduce a plant's dependence on its endophytic symbiont. Despite this, the interest and use of bio-insecticides and using endophytes to aid in plant growth is increasing as organic and
sustainable agriculture is considered more important. As humans become more aware of the damage that synthetic insecticides cause to the environment and beneficial insects such as bees and butterflies biological insecticides may become more important to the agricultural industry. == See also ==