Abstract

Aflatoxin B1 (AFB1), which is mainly produced by Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus, is the most toxic and hepatocarcinogenic polyketide known. Chemical fungicides are currently utilized to reduce this fungal contaminant, but they are potentially harmful to human health and the environment. Therefore, natural anti-aflatoxigenic products are used as sustainable alternatives to control food and feed contamination. For example, eugenol, presents in many essential oils, has been identified as an aflatoxin inhibitor. However, its exact mechanism of inhibition is yet to be clarified. In this study, the anti-aflatoxigenic mechanism of eugenol in A. flavus was determined using a comparative transcriptomic approach. Twenty of twenty-nine genes in the aflatoxin biosynthetic pathway were down-regulated by eugenol. The most strongly down-regulated gene was aflMa, followed by aflI, aflJ, aflCa, aflH, aflNa, aflE, aflG, aflM, aflD, and aflP. However, the expression of the regulator gene aflR did not change significantly and the expression of aflS was slightly up-regulated. The down-regulation of the global regulator gene veA resulted in the up-regulation of srrA, and the down-regulation of ap-1 and mtfA. The early developmental regulator brlA was profoundly up-regulated in A. flavus after eugenol treatment. These results suggested a model in which eugenol improves fungal development by up-regulating the expression of brlA by the suppression of veA expression and inhibits aflatoxin production through the suppression of veA expression. Exposure to eugenol also caused dysregulated transcript levels of the G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and oxylipins genes. A Gene Ontology analysis indicated that the genes that were highly responsive to eugenol were mainly enriched in RNA-binding functions, suggesting that post-transcriptional modification plays a pivotal role in aflatoxin biosynthesis. KEGG analysis showed that ribosome biogenesis was the most dysregulated pathway, suggesting that eugenol dysregulates ribosome biogenesis, which then interrupts the biosynthesis of Nor-1, Ver-1, and OmtA, and prevents aflatoxisomes performing their normal function in aflatoxin production. In conclusion, our results indicated that eugenol inhibited AFB1 production by modulating the expression of structural genes in aflatoxin pathway, fungal antioxidant status, post-transcriptional modifications and biosynthesis of backbone enzymes in A. flavus.

Highlights

  • Aspergillus flavus is a saprotrophic filamentous fungus that occurs widely in agricultural and medical products (Liang et al, 2015)

  • RNA sequencing of eugenol treated and untreated A. flavus YC-15 generated a total of 16.99 Gb of valid data and 64.65 million read pairs

  • We found that aflatoxin biosynthesis was repressed in A. flavus treated with eugenol (Liang et al, 2015)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Aspergillus flavus is a saprotrophic filamentous fungus that occurs widely in agricultural and medical products (Liang et al, 2015). It contaminates many important agro-products including peanut, maize, rice, cottonseed, sunflower seed, herbal material, and feeds (Cleveland et al, 2004; Liang et al, 2015). A. flavus produces many kinds of secondary metabolites including aflatoxin, cyclopiazonic acid, conidial pigment, aflatrem and kojic acid (Bennett and Klich, 2003; Hoffmeister and Keller, 2007). Aflatoxin is the most toxic and hepatocarcinogenic compound (Squire, 1981). Aflatoxin leads to acute intoxication, immune-system disruption and growth impairment in children (Groopman et al, 2008)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call