Abstract
BackgroundThe objective of the work was to characterize fungal endophytes from aerial parts of Vanilla planifolia. Also, to establish their biotransformation abilities of flavor-related metabolites. This was done in order to find a potential role of endophytes on vanilla flavors.ResultsTwenty three MOTUs were obtained, representing 6 fungal classes. Fungi from green pods were cultured on mature green pod based media for 30 days followed by 1H NMR and HPLC-DAD analysis. All fungi from pods consumed metabolized vanilla flavor phenolics. Though Fusarium proliferatum was recovered more often (37.6 % of the isolates), it is Pestalotiopsis microspora (3.0 %) that increased the absolute amounts (quantified by 1H NMR in μmol/g DW green pods) of vanillin (37.0 × 10−3), vanillyl alcohol (100.0 × 10−3), vanillic acid (9.2 × 10−3) and p-hydroxybenzoic acid (87.9 × 10−3) by significant amounts.ConclusionsAll plants studied contained endophytic fungi and the isolation of the endophytes was conducted from plant organs at nine sites in Réunion Island including under shade house and undergrowth conditions. Endophytic variation occured between cultivation practices and the type of organ. Given the physical proximity of fungi inside pods, endophytic biotransformation may contribute to the complexity of vanilla flavors.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12870-015-0522-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
The objective of the work was to characterize fungal endophytes from aerial parts of Vanilla planifolia
Endophytes were first isolated from vanilla in this work and their diversity and distribution were characterized
A series of experiments were conducted to investigate the potential effects of the presence of endophytes in green pods on flavor development in such pods given that vanilla are prized for flavor
Summary
The objective of the work was to characterize fungal endophytes from aerial parts of Vanilla planifolia. To establish their biotransformation abilities of flavor-related metabolites. Porras-Alfaro and Bayman [8] isolated nonpathogenic fungi from inside asymptomatic roots of vanilla plants. Mycorrhizal fungi interact symbiotically with roots through an association of the mycelium (typically basidiomycete) while the hyphae form a mass around the rootlets or penetrate root cells. They are absent from the outer root cortex and differ from endophytes that are present deeper inside plant tissues. Morphological identification followed by elongation factor gene sequence analysis showed that several Fusarium spp. are present in vanilla plants in Indonesia [9]
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