Abstract

Fungicide application remains amongst the most widely used methods of fungal control in agroecosystems. However, the extensive use of fungicides poses hazards to human health and the natural environment and does not always ensure the effective decrease of mycotoxins in food and feed. Nowadays, the rising threat from mycotoxin contamination of staple foods has stimulated efforts in developing alternative strategies to control plant pathogenic fungi. A substantial effort is focused on the identification of plant-derived compounds inhibiting mycotoxin production by plant pathogenic fungi. l-Pyroglutamic acid has recently been suggested as playing a role in the response of barley to toxigenic Fusaria. Considering the above, we studied the response of various strains of F. graminearum sensu stricto to different levels of l-pyroglutamic acid on solid YES (yeast extract sucrose) media. l-Pyroglutamic acid decreased the accumulation of trichothecenes in all examined strains. Gene expression studies addressing Tri genes (Tri4, Tri5, and Tri10), which induce the biosynthesis of trichothecenes, revealed the production of mycotoxins by l-pyroglutamic acid to be inhibited at the transcriptional level. Besides inhibitory effects on mycotoxin production, l-pyroglutamic acid exhibited variable and concentration-related effects on phenylpropanoid production by fungi. Accumulation of most of the fungal-derived phenolic acids decreased in the presence of 100 and 400 µg/g of l-pyroglutamic acid. However, a higher dose (800 µg/g) of l-pyroglutamic acid increased the accumulation of trans-cinnamic acid in the media. The accumulation of fungal-derived naringenin increased in the presence of l-pyroglutamic acid. Contrasting results were obtained for quercetin, apigenin, luteolin, and kaempferol, the accumulation of which decreased in the samples treated with 100 and 400 µg/g of l-pyroglutamic acid, whereas the highest l-pyroglutamic acid concentration (800 µg/g) seemed to induce their biosynthesis. The results obtained in this study provide new insights for breeders involved in studies on resistance against Fusaria.

Highlights

  • A common ascomycete fungus, Fusarium graminearum sensu stricto (s.s.) remains a severe cereal pathogen worldwide

  • We studied the effect of L-pyroglutamic acid on the accumulation of trichothecenes in the culture media as well as on the expression of the Tri genes (Tri4, Tri5, and Tri10) which induce their biosynthesis

  • We found that both gene expression and trichothecene accumulation were inhibited in all studied strains treated with L-pyroglutamic acid

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Summary

Introduction

A common ascomycete fungus, Fusarium graminearum sensu stricto (s.s.) remains a severe cereal pathogen worldwide. Simultaneous efforts have included in vitro studies evaluating the effect of these metabolites on fungal secondary metabolism. Phenylpropanoids have attracted the greatest attention in both in planta and in vitro studies [2,3,25,26,27,28,29,30] The latter ones have shown that phenylpropanoids display molecule-dependent inhibitory effects on mycotoxin production by fungi [2,3,27], including F. graminearum s.s. We characterized the impact of L-pyroglutamic acid on the secondary metabolism of. We studied the effect of L-pyroglutamic acid on the accumulation of trichothecenes in the culture media as well as on the expression of the Tri genes (Tri, Tri, and Tri10) which induce their biosynthesis. The results obtained in this study provide new insights, especially for breeders involved in studies on resistance against Fusaria

Results and Discussion
(Supplementary
Effect of L-Pyroglutamic Acid on the Expression of Tri Genes
Conclusions
Fungal Strains
Medium and Culture Conditions
Analysis of Trichothecene Concentrations from Fungal Cultures
Extraction of Total RNA and Preparation of cDNA
Gene Expression Analysis
Statistical Analyses
Full Text
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