Abstract

Fusarium graminearum is a major plant pathogen that causes devastating diseases of cereals and produces type B trichothecene (TCTB) mycotoxins in infected grains. A comprehensive understanding of the molecular and biochemical mechanisms underlying the regulation of TCTB biosynthesis is required for improving strategies to control the TCTB contamination of crops and ensuring that these strategies do not favor the production of other toxic metabolites by F. graminearum Elucidation of the association of TCTB biosynthesis with other central and specialized processes was the focus of this study. Combined 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) and liquid chromatography-quadrupole time of flight-mass spectrometry (LC-QTOF-MS) analyses were used to compare the exo- and endometabolomes of F. graminearum grown under toxin-inducing and -repressing caffeic acid conditions. Ninety-five metabolites were putatively or unambiguously identified, including 26 primary and 69 specialized metabolites. Our data demonstrated that the inhibition of TCTB production induced by caffeic acid exposure was associated with significant changes in the secondary and primary metabolism of F. graminearum, although the fungal growth was not affected. The main metabolic changes were an increase in the accumulation of several polyketides, including toxic ones, alterations in the tricarboxylic organic acid cycle, and modifications in the metabolism of several amino acids and sugars. While these findings provide insights into the mechanisms that govern the inhibition of TCTB production by caffeic acid, they also demonstrate the interdependence between the biosynthetic pathway of TCTB and several primary and specialized metabolic pathways. These results provide further evidence of the multifaceted role of TCTB in the life cycle of F. graminearumIMPORTANCEFusarium graminearum is a major plant pathogen that causes devastating diseases of cereal crops and produces type B trichothecene (TCTB) mycotoxins in infected grains. The best way to restrict consumer exposure to TCTB is to limit their production before harvest, which requires increasing the knowledge on the mechanisms that regulate their biosynthesis. Using a metabolomics approach, we investigated the interconnection between the TCTB production pathway and several fungal metabolic pathways. We demonstrated that alteration in the TCTB biosynthetic pathway can have a significant impact on other metabolic pathways, including the biosynthesis of toxic polyketides, and vice versa. These findings open new avenues for identifying fungal targets for the design of molecules with antimycotoxin properties and therefore improving sustainable strategies to fight against diseases caused by F. graminearum Our data further demonstrate that analyses should consider all fungal toxic metabolites rather than the targeted family of mycotoxins when assessing the efficacy of control strategies.

Highlights

  • Fusarium graminearum is a major plant pathogen that causes devastating diseases of cereals and produces type B trichothecene (TCTB) mycotoxins in infected grains

  • While 11 end products may seem quite low compared to the arsenal of 15 polyketide synthases (PKS) and 19 nonribosomal peptide synthases (NRPS) genes present in the F. graminearum genome [22] and to the 67 secondary metabolite clusters predicted by Sieber et al [31], several considerations should be borne in mind

  • The goal of the extraction protocols applied in metabolomic approaches is to attain a reproducible and comprehensive metabolite extraction, which may lead to a nonoptimal extraction for some secondary metabolites that may not be detectable due to masking effects of other metabolites

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Summary

Introduction

Fusarium graminearum is a major plant pathogen that causes devastating diseases of cereals and produces type B trichothecene (TCTB) mycotoxins in infected grains. The main metabolic changes were an increase in the accumulation of several polyketides, including toxic ones, alterations in the tricarboxylic organic acid cycle, and modifications in the metabolism of several amino acids and sugars While these findings provide insights into the mechanisms that govern the inhibition of TCTB production by caffeic acid, they demonstrate the interdependence between the biosynthetic pathway of TCTB and several primary and specialized metabolic pathways. In spite of this enhanced knowledge of the regulation of the TCTB biosynthetic pathway, the interconnections between the general regulatory circuits able to affect TCTB production remain to be detailed Deciphering this interconnection first requires the elucidation of how TCTB biosynthesis integrates with central and secondary or specialized metabolic pathways. Malonichrome, ferricrocin, and fusarinine are the three nonribosomal peptides for which production has been associated with the identified nonribosomal peptide synthase-encoding genes in F. graminearum [21]

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