Potential of Cladophialophora inabaensis EUCL1 and Exophiala sp. BCM1 for abiotic stress resilience in maize
Ni Luh Putu Citra Innosensia, Haoyue Lu, Kazuhiko Narisawa

TL;DR
This study shows that two fungi, Cladophialophora inabaensis EUCL1 and Exophiala sp. BCM1, can help maize grow better under stressful conditions like drought, salt, and alkaline soil.
Contribution
This is the first study to report the effectiveness of these two fungi in improving maize resilience to multiple abiotic stresses.
Findings
C. inabaensis EUCL1 significantly improved maize growth under drought, saline, and alkaline salt stress.
Exophiala sp. BCM1 increased shoot and root dry mass under drought stress in soil cultivation.
DSE inoculation successfully mitigated the negative effects of abiotic stress on maize growth parameters.
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of two dark septate endophytic (DSE) fungi, Cladophialophora inabaensis EUCL1 and Exophiala sp. BCM1, on maize growth under no-stress, drought, saline, and alkaline salt conditions. Maize was cultivated in agar and soil-based systems, and growth parameters including shoot and root lengths, biomass, chlorophyll content, and stem diameter were evaluated to assess the efficacy of DSE inoculation. Both C. inabaensis EUCL1 and Exophiala sp. BCM1 showed promising effects to ameliorate negative effects of drought, saline, and alkaline salt stress. Maize inoculated with C. inabaensis EUCL1 exhibited significantly enhanced growth under no-stress conditions. Under drought stress, C. inabaensis EUCL1 increased shoot length by 148.94% in vitro, while Exophiala sp. BCM1 improved shoot and root dry mass by 196.55 and 188.21% respectively, on soil cultivation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and fungal interactions · Plant-Microbe Interactions and Immunity · Plant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases
