| Literature DB >> 31735994 |
Abstract
Duddingtonia flagrans is a nematode-trapping fungus that has shown promising results as a tool to combat parasitic nematode infections in livestock. The fungus interrupts the parasitic lifecycle by trapping and killing larval stages on pasture to prevent re-infection of animals. One barrier to the fungus' commercial use is scaling up production of the fungus, and specifically of chlamydospores, which survive the digestive tract to grow in fecal pats on pasture, thus have potential as a feed through anthelmintic. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of dehydration on sporulation of the fungus. Disks of Duddingtonia flagrans type strain (ATCC® 13423™) were grown on 17% cornmeal agar for 26 days at 30 °C, then split into three groups; dried quickly at 38 °C and 37% humidity over 48 h ("incubated"), dried more slowly at 24 °C and 55% humidity over 10 days ("air-dried"), or kept at 30 °C and sealed with parafilm to prevent loss of moisture as a control ("wet"). Half of each dried culture was resuspended in water, then heated to liquify and homogenized through vortexing. Spores were then counted in a Neubauer hematocytometer. Both the "air-dried" and "incubated" drying techniques yielded significantly more spores than the "wet" control (Welch's two sample t test p values of .0359 and .0411, respectively). The difference in average chlamydospores per milliliter was insignificant between the two drying techniques, although a visual representation of the data shows less spore count variability in the "air-dried" technique.Entities:
Keywords: Biological control; Chlamydospore production; Duddingtonia flagrans; Helminth
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31735994 PMCID: PMC6942027 DOI: 10.1007/s00436-019-06499-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitol Res ISSN: 0932-0113 Impact factor: 2.289
Fig. 1a Sample of Duddingtonia flagrans kept in wet conditions on 17% cornmeal agar. b Sample of Duddingtonia flagrans grown on 17% cornmeal agar and subsequently dehydrated. The difference in media volume is approx. 92% reduction between a and b
Weight of each culture collected for counting after drying treatment, wet corresponds to control cultures, air to 24 °C drying group, and Inc. to 38 °C drying group
| Sample 1 (g) | Sample 2 (g) | Sample 3 (g) | Sample 4 (g) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wet | 1.23 | 0.12 | 0.99 | 1.27 |
| Air | 0.06 | 0.05 | 0.05 | 0.06 |
| Inc. | 0.06 | 0.06 | 0.08 | 0.05 |
Number of spores per mL after conversion from Neubauer hemocytometer counting chamber, with wet corresponding to control cultures, air to 24 °C drying group, and Inc. to 38 °C drying group
| Count 1 | Count 2 | Count 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wet 1 | 37,778 | 37,778 | 24,444 |
| Wet 2 | 33,333 | 30,000 | 53,333 |
| Wet 3 | 11,111 | 16,667 | 28,889 |
| Wet 4 | 10,000 | 22,222 | 15,556 |
| Air 1 | 22,222 | 50,000 | 115,556 |
| Air 2 | 15,556 | 10,000 | 33,333 |
| Air 3 | 20,000 | 108,889 | 16,667 |
| Air 4 | 18,888 | 75,556 | 26,667 |
| Inc. 1 | 24,444 | 22,222 | 123,333 |
| Inc. 2 | 28,889 | 63,333 | 31,111 |
| Inc. 3 | 22,222 | 24,444 | 27,778 |
| Inc. 4 | 46,667 | 30,000 | 26,667 |
Fig. 2Violin density plot of number of spores per milliliter, with air corresponding to 24 °C drying group, Inc. to 38 °C drying group, and wet to control cultures that were kept moist