| Literature DB >> 35711325 |
Firew Tafesse Mamo1,2,3, Bo Shang1,2, Jonathan Nimal Selvaraj4, Yongquan Zheng5, Yang Liu1,2.
Abstract
Application of atoxigenic strains of Aspergillus flavusto soils is the most successful aflatoxin biological control approach. The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacies of native non-aflatoxin producing (atoxigenic) strains as a biocontrol agent in peanut field in China. The competitive atoxigenic A. flavus strains (JS4, SI1and SXN) isolated from different crops, in China were used for field evaluation. The strains applied during the growing season (June - October, 2016) in the field at rate of 25 kg inoculum/hectare. The colonization of these biocontrol agents has been investigated and the population of A. flavus communities in soil were determined. The incidences of toxin producing (toxigenic) A. flavus strains and aflatoxin contamination in peanuts were also determined. Treated plots produced significant reductions in the incidence of toxigenic isolates of A. flavus in soil. However, the total fungal densities were not significantly different (p > 0.05) after treatments. Large percentage of aflatoxin reductions, ranging from 82.8% (SXN) up to 87.2% (JS4) were recorded in treated plots. Generally, the results suggest that the strategy can be used to control aflatoxin contamination and continuous evaluation should be done.Entities:
Keywords: Atoxigenic Aspergillus flavusstrains; aflatoxins; biocontrol; peanut; toxigenic Aspergillus flavusstrains
Year: 2021 PMID: 35711325 PMCID: PMC9196723 DOI: 10.1080/21501203.2021.1978573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycology ISSN: 2150-1203
Information about the competitive atoxigenic A. flavus strains used in the field
| Strain code | Location | Source | Sclerotia size a | Radial growth rate | Deletion pattern c |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SI | Sichuan | Rice | L | 0.67 | j |
| JS4 | Jiangsu | Peanut | L | 0.64 | l |
| SXN | Shaanxi | Peanut | L | 0.62 | r |
C.
Total mycobiota, Aspergillus section Flavi, A. flavus and incidence of toxigenic A. flavus from soil samples before and after treatments
| TR | Before treatments | 15 days after treatment | 30 days after treatment | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TMB | ASF | Af (cfu/g) a | AF+(%) b | TMB | ASF (cfu/g)a | Af | AF+ (%) b | TMB | ASF | Af | AF+ (%) b | |
| CK | 1 × 104 | 1 × 103 | 5 × 102 | 70 | 1.3 × 104b | 1.5x103a | 620 c | 28.4a | 1.6x104a | 1.7x103a | 250.3b | 40.8a |
| JS4 | - | - | - | - | 2.6× 105ab | 2.7x105a | 2.3x105ab | 4.9b | 2.3x105a | 2.1x105a | 2.x104a | 4.7b |
| SI | - | - | - | - | 1.2× 105ab | 7x104a | 7x104ab | 5.5b | 1.7x105a | 1.0x105a | 1.0x104a | 6.1b |
| SXN | - | - | - | - | 1.4× 105ab | 7.6x104a | 8.3x104ab | 12.3ab | 1.1x105a | 9.6x104a | 1.5x104a | 4.8b |
All the data represent the average values of three replicates.
aThe counts are expressed as colonies forming units per gram of soil (cfu/g).
bThese data are expressed as the percentage of the toxigenic strains (AF+(%)).
Abbreviations: TR-refers treatments, CK- control, ASF- Aspergillus section Flavi, TMB-total mycobiota, Af- A. flavus strains
Means in a column followed by the same letter are not significantly different (Tukey-Kramer HSD test, p > 0.05).
Infection of peanut kernels by total A. flavus, percentage of toxigenic A. flavus and aflatoxin contamination during the course of storage time
| Treatments | October-2016 | November-2016 | December-2016 | January-2017 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PIR(%)a | AF+(%)b | PIR(%)a | AF+(%)b | PIR(%)a | AF+(%)b | AFB1(ppb)c | PIR(%)a | AF+(%)b | AFB1(ppb)c | |
| Control | 10.0bd | 77.8a | 16.1b | 62.5a | 24.4b | 89.9a | 27.3a | 35.0a | 90.7a | 4.2 |
| JS4 | 23.9ab | 13.3b | 28.9a | 13.4b | 37.4ab | 9.2 c | 3.5 c | 41.6a | 11.8b | ND |
| SI | 23.3ab | 6.5b | 32.2a | 19.3b | 38.3a | 12.2 c | 4.6b | 40.0a | 12.0b | ND |
| SNX1 | 27.2a | 10.1b | 30.0a | 7.2b | 37.8ab | 19.1b | 4.7b | 46.1a | 21.8b | ND |
All the data represent the average values of three replicates.
aPeanut infection rate (PIR) is expressed as the percentage of peanut kernels infected with A. flavus.
bAF+, these data are expressed as the percentage of the toxigenic strains.
cAflatoxin levels (AFB1) are expressed as parts per billion (ppb) (ND = not detected; < 1 ppb).
Within a column, values not sharing a common letter are significantly different (Tukey-Kramer HSD test, p < 0:05).
Figure 3.Aflatoxin reduction in peanut kernels harvested.
Figure 4.Natural storage conditions of harvested peanuts.