The concern regarding the emergence of phytopathogens strains which are resistant to conventional agrochemicals has given support to the search for alternatives on the use of chemical pesticides in agriculture. In this context, microorganisms are considered as promising sources of useful natural compounds and actinobacteria are particularly relevant since they are known to produce several bioactive metabolites. The objective of this work was to investigate the production of secondary metabolites with antifungal activity by a strain of the actinobacteria Streptomyces lunalinharesii (A54A) under axenic conditions and in co-cultivation with the phytopathogen Rhizoctonia solani. Tests to evaluate antifungal activity of the extracts indicated the presence of diffusable molecules capable of inhibiting the growth of R. solani produced by S. lunalinharesii, especially when in the presence of the fungus during fermentation. Metabolomic analyzes allowed the putative annotation of the bioactive compounds desferrioxamine E and anisomycin, in addition to the evaluation of the metabolic profile of the isolate when grown in axenic mode and in co-cultivation, while statistical analyzes enabled the comparison of such profiles and the identification of metabolites produced in greater relative quantities in the elicitation condition. Such methodologies provided the selection of unknown features with high bioactive potential for dereplication, and several metabolites of S. lunalinharesii possibly represent novel compounds.

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