Abstract

Many cool-season grasses form permanent, mutualistic symbioses with asexual Epichloë endophytes. These fungal symbionts often perform a protective role within the association as many strains produce secondary metabolites that deter certain mammalian and invertebrate herbivores. Although initially a serious issue for agriculture, due to mammalian toxins that manifested in major animal health issues, selected strains that provide abiotic stress protection to plants with minimal ill effects to livestock are now commercialized and routinely used to enhance pasture performance in many farming systems. These fungal endophytes and their grass hosts have coevolved over millions of years, and it is now generally accepted that most taxonomic groupings of Epichloë are confined to forming compatible associations (i.e., symptomless associations) with related grass genera within a tribe. The most desired compounds associated with Epichloë festucae var. lolii, an endophyte species associated with perennial ryegrass, are peramine and epoxy-janthitrems. No other major secondary metabolites with invertebrate bioactivity have been identified within this association. However, other agriculturally beneficial compounds, such as lolines, have been discovered in related endophyte species that form associations with fescue grasses. A rationale therefore existed to develop novel grass-endophyte associations between loline-producing endophytes originally isolated from tall fescue with elite cultivars of perennial ryegrass to achieve a wider spectrum of insect bioactivity. A suitable loline-producing endophyte strain of Epichloë sp. FaTG-3 was selected and inoculated into perennial ryegrass. We hypothesed that endophyte transmission frequency, endophyte mycelial biomass and endophyte-derived alkaloid production would differ between the original tall fescue host and the artificial association. Consistent with our hypothesis, our data strongly suggest that plant species significantly affected the plant-endophyte association. This effect became more apparent for transmission frequency and endophyte biomass as the plants matured. Overall, the viable endophyte infection frequency was greater in the tall fescue host than in perennial ryegrass, at all sampling dates. Additionally, temperature was found to be a significant factor affecting endophyte transmission frequency, endophyte mycelial biomass and alkaloid production. Implications for the development of novel grass-endophyte associations are discussed.

Highlights

  • Members of the sub-family Pooideae form permanent, symbiotic associations with fungal endophytes of the genus Epichloë and their asexual morphs, previously known as Neotyphodium (Leuchtmann et al, 2014)

  • This study investigated the effects of different temperature regimes on the vertical transmission of an Epichloë endophyte strain within tall fescue and perennial ryegrass and further analyzed endophyte infected plants with respect to their mycelial biomass and production of insect deterrent alkaloids

  • We hypothesed that the endophyte transmission frequency, endophyte mycelial biomass and endophyte-derived alkaloid production would differ between associations formed between endophyte strain AR501 and the original host species, tall fescue, and the novel association developed with perennial ryegrass

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Summary

Introduction

Members of the sub-family Pooideae (family Poaceae) form permanent, symbiotic associations with fungal endophytes of the genus Epichloë (family Clavicipitaceae) and their asexual morphs, previously known as Neotyphodium (Leuchtmann et al, 2014). Lolii strains and elite cultivars of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) (Easton, 2007; Johnson et al, 2013), the dominant pasture species cultivated in NZ (Valentine and Kemp, 2007) These fungal-grass associations were detrimental to NZ agriculture around the late 1970s and early 1980s as some natural associations produced a number of mammalian toxins (indolediterpenes, e.g., lolitrem B, and ergot alkaloids, e.g., ergovaline) that manifested in major animal health issues including ryegrass staggers, a neurological disorder (di Menna et al, 2012). This knowledge led a NZ government-owned institute, AgResearch Limited, to develop an endophyte bioprospecting pipeline that identifies, characterizes and selects agriculturally beneficial strains (those that produce bio-protective properties to the host while conferring notably low or no detriment to grazing livestock) that can be incorporated into elite grass cultivars and marketed for increased pasture persistence and productivity (Johnson et al, 2013; Card et al, 2014; Bonth et al, 2015; Johnson and Caradus, 2019)

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