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Production of polysaccharide-degrading enzymes by saprophytic fungi from glyphosate-treated flax and their involvement in retting
Authors:AVERIL E. BROWN  H.S.S. SHARMA
Affiliation:Plant Pathology Research Division, Department of Agriculture for Northern Ireland and Faculty of Agriculture and Food Science, The Queen's University of Belfast, Belfast BT9 5PX
Abstract:The fungi present on glyphosate-treated flax plants were isolated. Cladosporium herbarum, Epicoccum nigrum, Botrytis cinerea and yeasts occurred most frequently immediately after glyphosate treatment but as retting progressed the frequency of occurrence of Fusarium culmorum, Alternaria alternata and a Phoma sp. increased. Many of the fungi isolated from retting flax were also present as epiphytes on healthy flax stems. Glyphosate was shown to be fungitoxic in vitro but it had only a very slight effect on fungi colonising the flax. The application of sucrose and urea to flax 1 wk after glyphosate treatment resulted in more rapid fungal colonisation of the stems, but did not significantly enhance retting. When grown on sterilised flax stem sections, fungi known to be saprophytic on flax produced polysaccharide-degrading enzymes. All seven fungi tested produced polygalacturonase, pectin-lyase and xylanase. The greatest cellulase activity was present in stem tissues inoculated with F. culmorum and the Phoma sp. while no cellulase was detected in tissue inoculated with B. cinerea, a Mucor sp. or a Penicillium sp. Extracts from flax inoculated with the cellulolytic fungi caused the solubilisation of native cellulose. Pectinases, xylanase and cellulase were also detected in naturally-colonised senescing and dead flax stems. Stems which had been treated with a sucrose solution tended to contain the greatest enzyme activity.
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