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Hydrogen peroxide induced by the fungicide prothioconazole triggers deoxynivalenol (DON) production by Fusarium graminearum
Author(s) -
Kris Audenaert,
Elien Callewaert,
Monica Höfte,
Sarah De Saeger,
Geert Haesaert
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
plant breeding and seed science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2083-599X
pISSN - 1429-3862
DOI - 10.2478/v10129-011-0011-4
Subject(s) - fungicide , fusarium , mycotoxin , biology , trichothecene , horticulture , hydrogen peroxide , azoxystrobin , pesticide , vomitoxin , agronomy , toxicology , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , zearalenone
Hydrogen peroxide induced by the fungicide prothioconazole triggers deoxynivalenol (DON) production by Fusarium graminearum Fusarium head blight is a very important disease of small grain cereals with F. graminearum as one of the most important causal agents. It not only causes reduction in yield and quality but from a human and animal healthcare point of view, it produces mycotoxins such as deoxynivalenol (DON) which can accumulate to toxic levels. Little is known about external triggers influencing DON production. In the present work, a combined in vivo/in vitro approach was used to test the effect of sub lethal fungicide treatments on DON production. Using a dilution series of prothioconazole, azoxystrobin and prothioconazole + fluoxastrobin, we demonstrated that sub lethal doses of prothioconazole coincide with an increase in DON production 48 h after fungicide treatment. In an artificial infection trial using wheat plants, the in vitro results of increased DON levels upon sub lethal prothioconazole application were confirmed illustrating the significance of these results from a practical point of view. In addition, further in vitro experiments revealed a timely hyperinduction of H 2 O 2 production as fast as 4h after amending cultures with prothioconazole. When applying H 2 O 2 directly to germinating conidia, a similar induction of DON-production by F. graminearum was observed. The effect of sub lethal prothioconazole concentrations on DON production completely disappeared when applying catalase together with the fungicide. These cumulative results suggest that H 2 O 2 induced by sub lethal doses of the triazole fungicide prothioconazole acts as a trigger of DON biosynthesis. In a broader framework, this work clearly shows that DON production by the plant pathogen F. graminearum is the result of the interaction of fungal genomics and external environmental triggers.

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