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Insect fungal symbionts: A promising source of detoxifying enzymes
Authors:Patrick F Dowd
Institution:(1) Mycotoxin Research Unit, National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, U.S.D.A., Agricultural Research Service, 1815 N. University St., 61604 Peoria, IL, USA
Abstract:Summary Many species of insects cultivate, inoculate, or contain symbiotic fungi. Insects feed on plant materials that contain plant-produced defensive toxins, or are exposed to insecticides or other pesticides when they become economically important pests. Therefore, it is likely that the symbiotic fungi are also exposed to these toxins and may actually contribute to detoxification of these compounds. Fungi associated with bark beetles, ambrosia beetles, termites, leaf-cutting ants, long-horned beetles, wood wasps, and drug store beetles can variously metabolize/detoxify tannins, lignins, terpenes, esters, chlorinated hydrocarbons, and other toxins. The fungi (Attamyces) cultivated by the ants and the yeast (Symbiotaphrina) contained in the cigarette beetle gut appear to have broad-spectrum detoxifying abilities. The present limiting factor for using many of these fungi for large scale detoxification of, for example, contaminated soils or agricultural commodities is their slow growth rate, but conventional strain selection techniques or biotechnological approaches should overcome this problem.Presented at the Symposium on Fungal Detoxification at the 48th Annual Meeting of the Society for Industrial Microbiology, Philadelphia, PA, August 4–9, 1991.
Keywords:Toxin  Secondary plant metabolite  Allelochemical  Insecticide  Mycotoxin  Endocytobiont
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