| Literature DB >> 25838075 |
Anne Hegge1, Rikke Lønborg2, Ditte Møller Nielsen3, Jens Laurids Sørensen4.
Abstract
Fusarium graminearum is a ubiquitous plant pathogen, which is able to produce several bioactive secondary metabolites. Recently, the cyclic lipopeptide fusaristatin A was isolated from this species and the biosynthetic gene cluster identified. Fusaristatin A consists of a C24 reduced polyketide and the three amino acids dehydroalanine, β-aminoisobutyric acid and glutamine and is biosynthesized by a collaboration of a polyketide synthase and a nonribosomal peptide synthetase. To gain insight into the environmental factors, which controls the production of fusaristatin A, we cultivated F. graminearum under various conditions. We developed an LC-MS/MS method to quantify fusaristatin A in F. graminearum extracts. The results showed that yeast extract sucrose (YES) medium was the best medium for fusaristatin A production and that the optimal pH was 7.5 and temperature 25-30 °C. Furthermore, production of fusaristatin A was more than four times higher in stationary cultures than in agitated cultures when F. graminearum was grown in liquid YES medium. The results also showed that fusaristatin A was only present in the mycelium and not in the liquid, which suggests that fusaristatin A is stored intracellulally and not exported to the extracellular environment.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25838075 PMCID: PMC4495368 DOI: 10.3390/metabo5020184
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolites ISSN: 2218-1989
Figure 1(a) Structure of fusaristatin A. (b) Standard curve of fusaristatin A in a twofold dilution series (19.5–20,000 ng/mL). (c) Chromatograms of fusaristatin A in reference solution (1250 ng/mL) and in an extract from F. graminearum grown on yeast extract sucrose (YES) containing 8.8 µg/mL.
Parameters for selected reaction monitoring (SRM) transitions for fusaristatin A.
| RTa | Precursor ion | Product ionsb | S-lens | CEc | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fusaristatin A | 3.45 | 659.4 [M+H]+ | 232.1/303.3/359.3 | 121 | 24/26/22 |
a Retention time; b Quantifier/qualifier/qualifier ions; c Collision energy (V) for product ions
Figure 2Production of fusaristatin by F. graminearum on seven different media, on Cz medium at pH 3.5–11.5, on YES medium after 3–days and on YES medium at 15–30 °C. The experiments were performed with 4–5 replicates and error bars represent standard error of mean (SEM).
Figure 3(A) Weight of mycelium F. graminearum in agitated (90 rpm) and stationary liquid YES medium after incubation for two weeks at 25 °C. (B) Production of fusaristatin A in agitated and stationary cultures (µg/g fresh mycelium and lyophilized medium). (C) Comparison of fusaristatin A yield in solid and liquid cultures (µg/g cultivation medium). The experiments were performed in triplicate and the error bars represent standard error of the mean (SEM).