About this Research Topic
However, Biocontrol approaches are not as widespread as chemical pesticides, despite their negative side effects. This is largely due to their frequent inconsistency, mainly when applied in field conditions. To avoid this limitation, it is necessary to make advances, to understand better how a BCAs works and enhance its efficiency and robustness in practical utilization as a biopesticide and assist researchers in selecting the most suitable strains of a given BCA. Modern molecular technologies have recently allowed researchers to explore nature as never before, providing powerful approaches to characterize BCA's modes of action. Among these new methodological approaches are the group of disciplines known under the term "omics." Omics techniques are applied in all life sciences areas and take particular biomolecular sets as study objects (e.g., DNA, RNA, proteins, or secondary metabolites) and use high-throughput procedures for their approach. We want to underline the importance of genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic knowledge in the understanding of the molecular reasons that render bacteria and fungi useful in biological control. Gather information about how multipartite relations work is central to turning agriculture into a productive, sustainable, environmentally friendly, and resilient system.
The purpose of this Research Topic is to welcome current researches on omic approaches used to learn more about the interactions between BCA-plant-pathogen and the environment and to accelerate the development of BCAs against plant pathogens. This special issue also welcomes scientific contributions on omic techniques' potentials and limitations to understand the complexity of these mechanisms.
In summary, it is feasible to visualize a near future in which the omic techniques will be an obligatory part of the development of the BCAs. Although each approach provides valuable information separately, we will show that, when combined, they paint a more comprehensive picture. This Research Topic welcome contribution focusing on but not restricted to:
· Development of new technologies to improve biological control against plant pathogens: genomic, proteomic, transcriptome, metabolomics, metagenomic
· Development of new biological control agents (BCAs) using new technologies
· Elucidating the action mode of biological control agents (fungi and bacteria) using biotechnological tools
· Induction of host defense mechanisms against plant pathogens by BCA
Keywords: Plant diseases, omic tools, biological control, biopesticides, microbial interaction
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.