Literature DB >> 11551550

Macrocyclic trichothecenes are undetectable in kudzu (Pueraria montana) plants treated with a high-producing isolate of Myrothecium verrucaria.

H K Abbas1, H Tak, C D Boyette, W T Shier, B B Jarvis.   

Abstract

Myrothecium verrucaria was found to be an effective pathogen against kudzu grown in the greenhouse and the field. M. verrucaria produced large amounts of macrocyclic trichothecenes when cultured on solid rice medium, including epiroridin E (16.8 mg/g crude extract), epiisororidin E (1 mg/g), roridin E (8.7 mg/g), roridin H (31.3 mg/g), trichoverrin A (0.6 mg/g), trichoverrin B (0.1 mg/g), verrucarin A (37.4 mg/g), and verrucarin J (2.2 mg/g). Most of these toxins were also isolated from M. verrucaria spores and mycelia grown on potato dextrose agar medium, including epiroridin E (32.3 mg/g), epiisororidin E (28.6 mg/g), roridin E (0 mg/g), roridin H (60 mg/g), trichoverrin A (1.3 mg/g), trichoverrin B (1.8 mg/g), verrucarin A (13.8 mg/g), and verrucarin J (131 mg/g). When M. verrucaria was cultured on liquid media, the numbers but not the amounts of toxins decreased. Only epiroridin E (28.3 mg/g), epiisororidin E (29.6 mg/g), verrucarin B (195 mg/g) and verrucarin J (52.6 mg/g) were measured when the fungus was cultured on cornsteep medium. On soyflour-cornmeal broth M. verrucaria produced several toxins, including epiroridin E (58.1 mg/g), epiisororidin E (5.8 mg/g), verrucarin B (29.9 mg/g) and verrucarin J (32 mg/g). In contrast, no macrocyclic trichothecenes were detected by HPLC analysis of plant tissues of kudzu, sicklepod, and soybean treated with aqueous suspensions of M. verrucaria spores formulated with a surfactant. Chloroform-methanol extracts of kudzu leaves and stems treated with M. verrucaria spores were less cytotoxic to four cultured mammalian cell lines than the corresponding extracts from control plants. Purified macrocyclic trichothecenes (verrucarin A and T-2 toxin) were very cytotoxic to the same cell lines (< or = 2 ng/ml). These results show that neither intact macrocyclic trichothecenes nor toxic metabolites could be detected in plant tissues after treatment with M. verrucaria spores. These results argue for both safety and efficacy for the use of M. verrucaria in biological control of kudzu and other noxious weeds, and support proceeding to animal feeding trials for further evaluation of safety.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11551550     DOI: 10.1016/s0031-9422(01)00214-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phytochemistry        ISSN: 0031-9422            Impact factor:   4.072


  3 in total

1.  Bioherbicidal activity from washed spores of Myrothecium verrucaria.

Authors:  Mark A Weaver; C Douglas Boyette; Robert E Hoagland
Journal:  World J Microbiol Biotechnol       Date:  2012-01-15       Impact factor: 3.312

2.  Verrucarin A and roridin E produced on spinach by Myrothecium verrucaria under different temperatures and CO2 levels.

Authors:  Ilenia Siciliano; Pietro Bosio; Giovanna Gilardi; Maria Lodovica Gullino; Angelo Garibaldi
Journal:  Mycotoxin Res       Date:  2017-03-09       Impact factor: 3.833

Review 3.  Effects of botanical dietary supplements on cardiovascular, cognitive, and metabolic function in males and females.

Authors:  Scott Carlson; Ning Peng; Jeevan K Prasain; J Michael Wyss
Journal:  Gend Med       Date:  2008
  3 in total

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