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1.
Three different mechanisms can be envisaged that are used by fungi to solubilize coal: the production of alkaline substances, the extrusion of chelators and, of special interest in the scope of biotechnology, the action of enzymes. Whether these mechanisms are operating separately or in various combinations has not yet been finally assessed. The two deuteromycetes Fusarium oxysporum and Trichoderma atroviride solubilize coal by synergistic effects of various different mechanisms depending on the cell metabolism. F. oxysporum seems to solubilize coal by increasing the pH of the mycelial surroundings and by the action of chelators induced during growth in glutamate-containing media (without involvement of enzymes). T. atroviride, on the other hand, appears to use, in addition to an alkaline pH and a high chelator activity, at least two classes of enzyme activity to attack coal: hydrolytic activity for coal solubilization and ligninolytic activity for degradation of humic acids. Received: 3 February 1998 / Received revision: 31 August 1998 / Accepted: 3 September 1998  相似文献   

2.
Aims: To isolate and identify antioomycete substances from Fusarium oxysporum EF119 against Phytophthora infestans and to investigate their antimicrobial activities against various plant pathogenic bacteria, oomycetes and true fungi. Methods and Results: Two antioomycete substances were isolated from liquid cultures of F. oxysporum EF119, which shows a potent disease control efficacy against tomato late blight caused by P. infestans. They were identified as bikaverin and fusaric acid by mass and nuclear magnetic resonance spectral analyses. They inhibited the mycelial growth of plant pathogenic oomycetes and fungi. Fusaric acid also effectively suppressed the cell growth of various plant pathogenic bacteria, but bikaverin was virtually inactive. Treatment with bikaverin at 300 μg ml?1 suppressed the development of tomato late blight by 71%. Fusaric acid provided effective control against tomato late blight and wheat leaf rust over 67% at concentrations more than 100 μg ml?1. Conclusions: Both bikaverin and fusaric acid showed in vitro and in vivo antioomycete activity against P. infestans. Significance and Impact of the Study: Fusarium oxysporum EF119 producing both bikaverin and fusaric acid may be used as a biocontrol agent against tomato late blight caused by P. infestans.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of the placement of inoculum of Fusarium oxysporum at two soil depths, and the sequences of inoculations with Meloidogyne arenaria and Fusarium oxysporum on root growth and development of root disease in Trifolium subterraneum L. (subterranean clover) were investigated. The timing of infection and the proximity of root tips of the host root system to infection by M. arenaria and F. oxysporum appeared to be the major determining factors of root growth and of disease development in plants exposed to the pathogens. Immediate contact of roots with F. oxysporum (where the fungus was placed at seed level of 10 mm depth) appeared to result in more severe effects on roots in the presence of the nematode than later infection by the fungus placed at 30 mm depth. The production of galls by the nematode and early infection by F. oxysporum at 10 mm depth resulted in a severe inhibition of root growth, particularly of the lateral roots. But no such growth inhibition was evident when F. oxysporum and M. arenaria were introduced together at the lower depth of 30 mm. The lowest density of M. arenaria inoculum was sufficient to cause severe root rot if F. oxysporum was present at the host seed level. With the fungus at 30 mm depth, however, the expression of root rot appeared to be influenced by the inoculum level of the nematode. In sequential inoculation with F. oxysporum or M. arenaria, the organism added 2 weeks later had little or no effect on root development. The first organism (M. arenaria or F. oxysporum) to infect the germinated seedlings was the main cause of root growth inhibition. The organism that came into contact with the roots 2 weeks later had little or no effect on the roots. Concurrent infection by F. oxysporum and M. arenaria resulted in less M. arenaria gall production on the tap root system than those added with the nematode alone or in advance of the fungus.  相似文献   

4.
Fungus gnat adults transported Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. radicis-lycopersici from Petri dish culture and infected host plants to the roots and hypocotyls of healthy tomato and bean plants. The source of the fungus did not affect the ability of fungus gnats to transport the fungus to healthy hosts. The presence of fungus gnat larvae in media in which young tomato plants were grown did not increase the incidence of plant infection by the pathogen. Fungus gnat adults appear to aid in the dissemination of F. oxysporum f.sp. radicis-lycopersici.  相似文献   

5.
The fungus Fusarium fujikuroi (Gibberella fujikuroi mating group C) exhibits a rich secondary metabolism that includes the synthesis of compounds of biotechnological interest, such as gibberellins, bikaverin, and carotenoids. The effect of the carbon source on their production was checked using a two-phase incubation protocol, in which nine different sugars were added upon transfer of the fungus from repressed to appropriate inducing conditions, i.e., nitrogen starvation for gibberellins and bikaverin and illumination for carotenoids production. Most of the carbon sources allowed the synthesis of these metabolites in significant amounts. However, bikaverin production was strongly increased by the presence of sucrose in comparison to other carbon sources, an effect not exhibited for the production of gibberellins and carotenoids. The bikaverin inducing effect was enhanced in the absence of phosphate and/or sulfate. Similar results were also observed in carotenoid-overproducing strains known to be altered in bikaverin production. The induction by salt starvation, but not by sucrose, correlated with an increase in messenger RNA levels of gene bik1, encoding a polyketide synthase of the bikaverin pathway.  相似文献   

6.
The interaction between Fusarium oxysporum (cause of cotton wilt) and Cephalosporium maydis (cause of maize late-wilt) on cotton roots is associated with an appreciable decrease in the severity of the cotton wilt disease. Reduction in infection is more pronounced when the latter fungus precedes the former in the soil than when they are inoculated simultaneously. C. maydis exerts little or no such effect when it follows F. oxysporum in the soil. C. maydis grows on the surface of cotton roots near growing points as a root-surface inhabitant. Dark red lesions are produced but these disappear, as does the fungus, when the root becomes hardened either naturally or in response to the growth of the fungus on the surface. The presence of the fungus is associated with increased production of root laterals. Cotton plants, including those which may appear healthy, show only mild internal symptoms of Fusarium infection when grown in soil inoculated with the two fungi, suggesting that the decreased severity of wilt is largely due to increased tolerance of the plants to infection with the disease as a result of increased number of root laterals. It is also possible that cotton roots with C. maydis on their surface become less suitable for the progress of F. oxysporum. F. oxysporum produces in culture a metabolite inhibitory to C. maydis. This may partly account for the little effect that the latter fungus exerts on the severity of wilt when it follows F. oxysporum in the soil. It appears that the interaction between F. oxysporum and C. maydis does not affect the pathogenicity of the latter fungus to maize.  相似文献   

7.
Production of bikaverin has been examined in 130Fusarium isolates belonging to 21 species. The highest yield of bikaverin was produced on autoclaved rice — up to 2.5g/kg of dry culture. Bikaverin was produced by the following species:F verticillioides, F sacchari varsubglutinans, F proliferatum, F anthophilum, F oxysporum, F dlamini, F nygamai, F napiforme, andF solani. SpeciesF coeruleum, F poae, F sporotrichioides, F tricinctum, F chlamydosporum, F culmorum, F graminearum, F cerealis (F crookwellense), F avenaceum, F acuminatum, andF equiseti did not produce bikaverin. The production of bikaverin determines the colour of the mentionedFusarium species cultures on agar media and on rice. The pigment has indicator properties and changes colour from red in acidic solution to violet-blue in alkaline. The role it plays in fungus metabolism is not elucidated.  相似文献   

8.
Fusarium oxysporum is an important plant pathogen that causes severe damage of many economically important crop species. Various microorganisms have been shown to inhibit this soil‐borne plant pathogen, including non‐pathogenic F. oxysporum strains. In this study, F. oxysporum wild‐type (WT) MSA 35, a biocontrol multispecies consortium that consists of a fungus and numerous rhizobacteria mainly belonging to γ‐proteobacteria, was analyzed by two complementary metaproteomic approaches (2‐DE combined with MALDI‐Tof/Tof MS and 1‐D PAGE combined with LC‐ESI‐MS/MS) to identify fungal or bacterial factors potentially involved in antagonistic or synergistic interactions between the consortium members. Moreover, the proteome profiles of F. oxysporum WT MSA 35 and its cured counter‐part CU MSA 35 (WT treated with antibiotics) were compared with unravel the bacterial impact on consortium functioning. Our study presents the first proteome mapping of an antagonistic F. oxysporum strain and proposes candidate proteins that might play an important role for the biocontrol activity and the close interrelationship between the fungus and its bacterial partners.  相似文献   

9.
Fusarium oxysporum is a filamentous fungus that damages a wide range of plants and thus causes severe crop losses. In fungal pathogens, the genes and proteins involved in virulence are known to be controlled by environmental pH. Here, we report the influence of culture-medium pH (5, 6, 7, and 8) on the production of degradative enzymes involved in the pathogenesis of F. oxysporum URM 7401 and on the 2D-electrophoresis profile of intracellular proteins in this fungus. F. oxysporum URM 7401 was grown in acidic, neutral, and alkaline culture media in a submerged bioprocess. After 96?hr, the crude extract was processed to enzyme activity assays, while the intracellular proteins were obtained from mycelium and analyzed using 2D electrophoresis and mass spectrometry. We note that the diversity of secreted enzymes was changed quantitatively in different culture-medium pH. Also, the highest accumulated biomass and the intracellular protein profile of F. oxysporum URM 7401 indicate an increase in metabolism in neutral–alkaline conditions. The differential profiles of secreted enzymes and intracellular proteins under the evaluated conditions indicate that the global protein content in F. oxysporum URM 7401 is modulated by extracellular pH.  相似文献   

10.
Callus cultures derived from isogenic lines of the tomato cultivars Moneymaker and Craigella, resistant or susceptible to F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici, were inoculated with Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici race 1. Fungal growth was restricted on callus derived from resistant plants, after inoculation with a conidial suspension, whereas callus derived from susceptible plants was totally overgrown by the fungus within 7 days. The concentration of the phytoalexin rishitin was significantly higher in the callus culture derived from a resistant tomato line compared with the callus culture from a susceptible line, 2 and 3 days after inoculation with mycelium. The results of the experiments were compared with experiments with whole plants. Rishitin production as well as growth of the fungus was comparable with responses in plant-fungus interaction. Therefore callus culture may be useful in studying the interaction between tomato plants and race 1 of F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici.  相似文献   

11.
Fusarium oxysporum, the causal agent of vascular wilt disease, affects a wide range of plant species and can produce disseminated infections in humans. F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici isolate FGSC 9935 causes disease both on tomato plants and immunodepressed mice, making it an ideal model for the comparative analysis of fungal virulence on plant and animal hosts. Here we tested the ability of FGSC 9935 to cause disease in the greater wax moth Galleria mellonella, an invertebrate model host that is widely used for the study of microbial human pathogens. Injection of living but not of heat-killed microconidia into the hemocoel of G. mellonella larvae resulted in dose-dependent killing both at 30 °C and at 37 °C. Fluorescence microscopy of larvae inoculated with a F. oxysporum transformant expressing GFP revealed hyphal proliferation within the hemocoel, interaction with G. mellonella hemocytes, and colonization of the killed insects by the fungus. Fungal gene knockout mutants previously tested in the tomato and immunodepressed mouse systems displayed a good correlation in virulence between the Galleria and the mouse model. Thus, Galleria represents a useful non-vertebrate infection model for studying virulence mechanisms of F. oxysporum on animal hosts.  相似文献   

12.
Free living amoebae and Fusarium oxysporum can be recovered in the same environment and may potentially interact. The presence of these protozoa could lead to an increased development of this filamentous fungus. To assess this potential risk, the interactions between two free living amoebae, Acanthamoeba castellanii and Hartmanella vermiformis, and F. oxysporum, which can be isolated from soil and water, were studied. After 48 hr of coincubation in tap water, culturable fungi were quantified. In addition, the interactions between the free living amoebae and the fungus were investigated using electron microscopy. We show that the presence of amoeba trophozoites increased the growth of F. oxysporum without fungal influence on amoebae viability. In the same way, incubation of the fungus with culture supernatants of the two amoebae induced fungal germination and increased fungal growth. The results of this study confirm that the presence of amoebae should be taken into consideration in the different environments where they may be in contact with Fusarium.  相似文献   

13.
Bikaverin is a reddish pigment produced by different fungal species, most of them from the genus Fusarium, with antibiotic properties against certain protozoa and fungi. Chemically, bikaverin is a polyketide with a tetracyclic benzoxanthone structure, resulting from the activity of a specific class I multifunctional polyketide synthase and subsequent group modifications introduced by a monooxygenase and an O-methyltransferase. In some fungi, bikaverin is found with smaller amounts of a precursor molecule, called norbikaverin. Production of these metabolites by different fungal species depends on culture conditions, but it is mainly affected by nitrogen availability and pH. Regulation of the pathway has been investigated in special detail in the gibberellin-producing fungus Fusarium fujikuroi, whose genes and enzymes responsible for bikaverin production have been recently characterized. In this fungus, the synthesis is induced by nitrogen starvation and acidic pH, and it is favored by other factors, such as aeration, sulfate and phosphate starvation, or sucrose availability. Some of these inducing agents increase mRNA levels of the enzymatic genes, organized in a coregulated cluster. The biological properties of bikaverin include antitumoral activity against different cancer cell lines. The diverse biological activities and the increasing information on the biochemical and genetic basis of its production make bikaverin a metabolite of increasing biotechnological interest.  相似文献   

14.
Paxillus involutus, an ectomycorrhizal fungus, had an inhibitory effect on the root pathogenic fungus Fusarium moniliforme and two isolates of F. oxysporum when grown in paired cultures on modified Melin Norkrans’ medium. In contrast, one isolate of F. oxysporum was not inhibited and another damping-off fungus, Cylindrocarpon destructans inhibited growth of Pax. involutus in similar paried cultures. Survival of Pinus resinosa (red pine) seedlings was increased significantly when they were grown in vitro concomitantly with either Pax. involutus and F. moniliforme or Pax. involutus and the three isolates of F. oxysporum, compared with seedlings inoculated with either F. moniliforme or F. oxysporum isolates alone. pax. involutus showed no protective effect against C. destructans. The number of colony forming units of Fusarium spp. was reduced significantly in the root extract and rhizosphere substrate of P. resinosa seedlings inoculated with Pax. involutus. Spore germination of Fusarium spp. was reduced significantly when treated with culture filtrate of Pax. involutus and root extract of P. resinosa seedlings inoculated with Pax. involutus. Neither colony forming units nor spore germination of C. destructans was affected either by culture filtrate of Pax. involutus or root extract of P. resinosa seedlings inoculated with Pax. involutus.  相似文献   

15.
This study analysed the interspecific relationships between the dominant arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus, Funneliformis mosseae, and the major soybean root rot pathogen, Fusarium oxysporum, in the rhizosphere soil of continuous cropped soybean. Our aim was to provide theoretical evidence on the AM fungi to overcome the obstacles of soybean continuous cropping. We selected soybean cultivars, including Kenfeng 16 (an intermediate cultivar), Heinong 44 (a high-fat cultivar) and Heinong 48 (a high-protein cultivar), and sowed in the soybean continuous cropping soil under different treatments. The infection status of the soybean roots during the branching period by Fu. mosseae and F. oxysporum was estimated using the standard polymerase chain reaction method, as well as their colonisation status in rhizosphere soil. The AM fungal colonisation rates and F. oxysporum disease incidence of soybean roots were determined, respectively. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction was applied to analyse the DNA content of Fu. mosseae and F. oxysporum to investigate the relationship between Fu. mosseae and F. oxysporum. The results show that both Fu. mosseae and F. oxysporum can infect the soybean roots during the branching period and colonise the rhizosphere. However, the DNA content of F. oxysporum clearly decreased in soybean root and rhizosphere samples after the inoculation with Fu. mosseae. In addition, the disease incidence of F. oxysporum significantly decreased after inoculation with Fu. mosseae, which might indicate inhibitive effects of Fu. mosseae over F. oxysporum.  相似文献   

16.
Fusarium oxysporum is an important soilborne fungal pathogen with many different formae speciales that can colonize the plant vascular system and cause serious crop wilt disease worldwide. We found a glycoside hydrolase family 12 protein FoEG1, secreted by F. oxysporum, that acted as a pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP) targeting the apoplast of plants to induce cell death. Purified FoEG1 protein triggered cell death in different plants and induced the plant defence response to enhance the disease resistance of plants. The ability of FoEG1 to induce cell death was mediated by leucine-rich repeat (LRR) receptor-like kinases BAK1 and SOBIR1, and this ability was independent of its hydrolase activity. The mutants of cysteine residues did not affect the ability of FoEG1 to induce cell death, and an 86 amino acid fragment from amino acid positions 144 to 229 of FoEG1 was sufficient to induce cell death in Nicotiana benthamiana. In addition, the expression of FoEG1 was strongly induced in the early stage of F. oxysporum infection of host plants, and FoEG1 deletion or loss of enzyme activity reduced the virulence of F. oxysporum. Therefore, our results suggest that FoEG1 can contribute to the virulence of F. oxysporum depending on its enzyme activity and can also act as a PAMP to induce plant defence responses.  相似文献   

17.
18.
A stem canker disease was observed on the phoenix trees located in the region of Dezhou, Shandong province. Symptomatic stems were collected and evaluated for the possible casual agent of the disease. A fungus resembling Fusarium sp. was consistently isolated from pieces of symptomatic tissues. The fungus formed abundant aerial mycelium on potato dextrose agar and produced the micro‐ and macro‐conidia on carnation leaf agar. The nucleotide sequences of the internal transcribed spacer of the rDNA from three representative isolates showed 100% identical to those of Fusarium oxysporum isolates deposited in the GenBank database. On the basis of morphological characteristics, pathogenicity test and molecular identification, the causal agent was identified as F. oxysporum. To our knowledge, this is the first report of stem canker on phoenix tree caused by F. oxysporum in China.  相似文献   

19.
Reduction of inorganic sulfur compounds by the fungus Fusarium oxysporum was examined. When transferred from a normoxic to an anoxic environment, F. oxysporum reduced elemental sulfur to hydrogen sulfide (H2S). This reaction accompanied fungal growth and oxidation of the carbon source (ethanol) to acetate. Over 2-fold more of H2S than of acetate was produced, which is the theoretical correlation for the oxidation of ethanol to acetate. NADH-dependent sulfur reductase (SR) activity was detected in cell-free extracts of the H2S-producing fungus, and was found to be up-regulated under the anaerobic conditions. On the other hands both O2 consumption by the cells and cytochrome c oxidase activity by the crude mitochondrial fractions decreased. These results indicate that H2S production involving SR was due to a novel dissimilation mechanism of F. oxysporum, and that the fungus adapts to anaerobic conditions by replacing the energy-producing mechanism of O2 respiration with sulfur reduction.  相似文献   

20.
In greenhouse experiments, the ectomycorrhizal fungus Laccaria laccata was evaluated for biological control of preemergence, post-emergence and late damping-off of Pinus pinea caused by Fusarium verticillioides and F. oxysporum. In pre-emergence damping-off assays, preinoculation with Laccaria laccata did not significantly improve germination of seeds and no statistical significant differences were found in Fusarium treatments when compared with controls. At 18 weeks after sowing, inoculation with L. laccata reduced the incidence of post-emergence damping-off but differences were significant only in F. oxysporum treatments. Pinus pinea transplanted plants were used in late damping off assays, and only F. oxysporum produced significant damage. Inoculation with L. laccata did not attenuate significantly the virulence of F. oxysporum. However, the percentage of mycorrhization did not reached significant level, so the amount of mycorrhizal fungus was insufficient for effective protection. Although very low percentages of mycorrhization were recorded in all mycorrhized treatments, and Fusarium occurrence significantly reduced mycorrhization, those levels have been efficient to reduce damage in F. oxysporum post-emergence damping-off assays. In short, pre-emergence damping-off was not found; only F. oxysporum produced significant damage on P. pinea seedlings and L. laccata reduced damage when the percentage of mycorrhization reached a significant level. These results have been compared with previous work on P. sylvestris inoculated with the same mycorrhizae isolate and Fusarium pathogens.  相似文献   

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