Abstract

Two mutant strains of Aspergillus parasiticus, both deficient in aflatoxin production, were used to elucidate the biosynthetic pathway of this mycotoxin. One of the mutants, A. parasiticus ATCC 24551, was capable of accumulating large amounts of averufin, and the other, A. parasiticus 1-11-105 wh-1, accumulated versicolorin A. The averufin producing mutant efficiently converted 14C-labeled versiconal acetate, versicolorin A, and sterigmatocystin into aflatoxin B 1 and G 1, indicating that averufin preceded these compounds in the aflatoxin biosynthetic pathway. In the presence of dichlorvos (dimethyl 2,2-dichlorovinyl phosphate), a known inhibitor of aflatoxin biosynthesis, the conversion of versicolorin A and sterigmatocystin was unaffected, but the conversion of versiconal acetate was markedly inhibited. The mutant accumulating versicolorin A incorporated 14C-labeled acetate, averufin, and versiconal acetate into versicolorin A. In the presence of dichlorvos, however, the major conversion product was versiconal acetate. This strongly suggested that dichlorvos inhibited the conversion step of versiconal acetate into versicolorin A. This mutant resumed production of aflatoxin B 1 if sterigmatocystin was added to the resting cell cultures, indicating that the mutant was blocked at the enzymatic step catalyzing the conversion of versicolorin A into sterigmatocystin, and as a result was incapable of aflatoxin production. The experimental evidence is thus provided for the involvement and interrelationship of three anthraquinones (averufin, versiconal acetate, and versicolorin A) and a xanthone (sterigmatocystin) in aflatoxin biosynthesis. A pathway for the biosynthesis of aflatoxin B 1 is proposed to be: acetate →→→ averufin → versiconal acetate → versicolorin A → sterigmatocystin → aflatoxin B 1.

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