The Fungal Biorevolution: A Trifecta of Genome Mining, Synthetic Biology, and RNAi for Next-Generation Fungicides
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Modern agriculture is at a crossroads, facing the dual crises of growing fungicide resistance and the adverse environmental impact of conventional agrochemicals. This scenario demands a paradigm shift that goes beyond the simple substitution of chemical products. This review article proposes an integrated and synergistic solution based on the convergence of three cutting-edge technologies: genome mining, synthetic biology, and RNA interference (RNAi). For this review, we analyze how genome mining enables the rational discovery of new antifungal compounds from the vast and untapped genetic potential of fungi, overcoming the limitations of random screening. Next, it details how synthetic biology provides the tools to produce these discovered compounds in a scalable and cost-effective manner in optimized microbial "chassis," addressing the historical bottlenecks of natural product production. Finally, RNAi is explored, specifically through Spray-Induced Gene Silencing (SIGS), as a high-precision weapon for pathogen neutralization without genetic modification, with a unique potential for managing resistance. The central thesis is that the synergy of this technological trifecta—discovery, production, and resistance management—constitutes a robust and adaptable pipeline to develop a new generation of biofungicides that are potent, specific, sustainable, and ecologically compatible, outlining a viable future for crop protection.