| Literature DB >> 22069741 |
Susan P McCormick1, April M Stanley, Nicholas A Stover, Nancy J Alexander.
Abstract
As the world's population grows, access to a safe food supply will continue to be a global priority. In recent years, the world has experienced an increase in mycotoxin contamination of grains due to climatic and agronomic changes that encourage fungal growth during cultivation. A number of the molds that are plant pathogens produce trichothecene mycotoxins, which are known to cause serious human and animal toxicoses. This review covers the types of trichothecenes, their complexity, and proposed biosynthetic pathways of trichothecenes.Entities:
Keywords: Type A; Type B; d-type; macrocyclic; mycotoxins; t-type; toxin biosynthesis; trichothecenes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22069741 PMCID: PMC3202860 DOI: 10.3390/toxins3070802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Classification of trichothecene structures. EPT (12,13-epoxytrichothec-9-ene); R groups may be H, OH, OAcyl, or variations in the macrolide chain.
Figure 2Proposed trichothecene biosynthetic pathway in Fusarium. Genes encoding an enzymatic step are identified near the arrow indicating the step. Dashed arrows indicate steps for which a gene has not been assigned. Green box indentifies Type B trichothecenes.
Figure 3Proposed trichothecene biosynthetic pathways illustrating the divergence into the d-type (from isotrichodiol) (orange box) and the t-type (from isotrichotriol) (violet box) trichothecenes. Blue boxes indicate Type A trichothecenes; green boxes indicate Type B trichothecenes; red box indicates Type D trichothecene.
Classification of selected trichothecenes.
| Trichothecene | Simple or Macrocyclic (S or M) | Type 1 | Group 2 | Type 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 trichodermol | S | A | I | d |
| 2 trichodermin | S | A | I | d |
| 3 4,15-Diacetoxyscirpenol (DAS) | S | A | t | |
| 4 neosolaniol | S | A | II | t |
| 5 T-2 toxin | S | A | II | t |
| 6 isotrichodermol | S | A | I | t |
| 7 calonectrin | S | A | t | |
| 8 7,8-dihydroxy calonectrin | S | A | II | t |
| 9 harzianum A | S | A | d | |
| 10 nivalenol (NIV) | S | B | III | t |
| 11 deoxynivalenol (DON) | S | B | III | t |
| 12 fusarenon-X | S | B | III | t |
| 13 trichothecin | S | B | III | d |
| 14 trichothecinol A | S | B | III | t |
| 15 crotocin | S | C | d | |
| 16 satratoxin H | M | D | d | |
| 17 roridin A | M | D | d | |
| 18 baccharin | M | D | d | |
| 19 verrucarin A | M | D | d |
1 Based on presence of C-8 keto group (Type B), C-7, C-8 epoxy (Type C), ring connecting C-4 and C-15 (Type D) [29]; 2 Based on substitutions in the A and C ring [67]; 3 Based on presence (t-type)or absence (d-type) of C-3 oxygen function [40].