# Management of bacterial blight of carrots by phenolic compounds treatment

**Authors:** Eliška Hakalová, Dorota A. Tekielska, Jan Wohlmuth, Jana Čechová

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0299105 · PLOS ONE · 2024-04-01

## TL;DR

This study explores using phenolic compounds like carvacrol to manage bacterial blight in carrots, offering a potentially safer alternative to traditional treatments.

## Contribution

The study identifies carvacrol as a promising alternative treatment for bacterial blight in carrot seeds.

## Key findings

- 0.0196% carvacrol solution effectively eliminated Xanthomonas hortorum pv. carotae from low-infested seeds.
- Sodium hypochlorite and hot water treatments reduced Xhc in medium-infested seeds but affected germination.
- Carvacrol is suggested as a cost-effective alternative to sodium hypochlorite and hot water treatments.

## Abstract

Bacterial blight is a serious disease of carrot production worldwide. Under favorable conditions, the causal organism Xanthomonas hortorum pv. carotae causes serious loss especially in seed production because of its seed-borne character. Unlike fungal diseases, the treatment of bacterial diseases is limited and methods such as hot water or sodium hypochlorite (bleach) treatment are mainly used by seed companies. Here, we compared the efficacy of hot water treatment, sodium hypochlorite treatment and treatment with three phenolic compounds–carvacrol, thymol and eugenol, to eliminate Xanthomonas growth in vitro and subsequently in vivo on seeds of Xhc low, medium and highly infested carrot seed lots. The complete elimination of Xhc from germinated plants was obtained only for Xhc low infested seed lot with 1% sodium hypochlorite and carvacrol solutions in concentrations of 0.0196%– 0.313%. The significant reduction of Xhc presence in germinated plants of Xhc medium infested seed lot was achieved with 1% sodium hypochlorite treatment and hot water treatment. However, hot water treatment resulted in a significant reduction of seed germination percentage as well. Considering the elimination of Xhc infection from germinated plants and the effect on seed germination and plant vigor, 0.0196% carvacrol solution was suggested as an alternative to 1% sodium hypochlorite treatment regarding additional costs related to the liquidation of used treated water and to hot water treatment that has been proved to be insufficient to obtain disease-free plants.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** carvacrol (PubChem CID 10364), thymol (PubChem CID 6989), eugenol (PubChem CID 3314), sodium hypochlorite (PubChem CID 23665760)
- **Species:** Xanthomonas hortorum pv. carotae (taxon 487904)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** fungal diseases (MESH:D009181), Xhc infection (MESH:D007239), Bacterial blight (MESH:D001424)
- **Chemicals:** eugenol (MESH:D005054), thymol (MESH:D013943), phenolic compounds (-), water (MESH:D014867), sodium hypochlorite (MESH:D012973), carvacrol (MESH:C073316)
- **Species:** Daucus carota (carrot, species) [taxon 4039], Xanthomonas (genus) [taxon 338]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10984397/full.md

## References

32 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10984397/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10984397