| Literature DB >> 35736056 |
Orquídea Pérez-González1, Ricardo Gomez-Flores1, Patricia Tamez-Guerra1.
Abstract
Studies on Hirsutella citriformis Speare are scarce. Among these, some reports have focused on phenotypic identification, based on its morphological structure and morphometric characteristics. This fungus is known to control economically important citrus crop pests. In recent years, H. citriformis has received increased attention as a control agent for the Asian citrus psyllid Diaphorina citri Kuwayama (Hemiptera: Liviidae), which causes the Huanglongbing (HLB) disease. Unfortunately, formal H. citriformis strains characterization is marginal, which mainly involves the role of biologically active exudates (metabolites) produced during their growth. Information regarding their mode of action and biocontrol potential is limited. However, epizootics reports of this fungus, under suitable environmental conditions for its development (25 °C to 28 °C and ~80% relative humidity), have demonstrated its parasitization efficacy. Therefore, it becomes challenging to determine whether H. citriformis strains may be developed as commercial products. In this review, we showed relevant information on isolation and bioassay strategies of H. citriformis to evaluate potential biocontrol strains under laboratory and field conditions in America.Entities:
Keywords: Diaphorina citri; Huanglongbing (HLB) disease; biocontrol agents; entomopathogenic fungi; insect parasitization; metabolites production
Year: 2022 PMID: 35736056 PMCID: PMC9224614 DOI: 10.3390/jof8060573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Figure 1Hirsutella citriformis mycelium structures. (A) H. citriformis synnemata developing on Diaphorina citri and (B) phialide and conidia. Measurements are in micrometers.
Figure 2Mexican Hirsutella strains morphological characteristics. (A) Phialide length, (B) conidium width, (C) conidium length, (D) conidium width, including the mucilaginous envelope, and (E) conidium length, including the mucilaginous envelope. Measurements are in micrometers.
Most representative reported Hirsutella citriformis structure measurements (µm).
| Reference | Source 1 | Phialide Length | Conidium | Mucus Diameter | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Base | Sterigma | Length | Diameter | |||
| [ | H | 5.5–8.5 | 1.5–1.8 | ||||
| [ | H | 36.0–54.0 | 6.0–14.0 | 30.0–40.0 | 5.0–8.0 | 2.0–2.5 | |
| [ | H | 18.5–52.0 | 3.5–5.0 | 1.0–1.5 | |||
| [ | CM | 27.5–62.3 | 5.1–9.4 | 22.4–52.9 | 6.4–7.6 | 2.1–2.8 | |
| [ | H | 16.8–23.6 | 6.8–9.1 | 1.5–2.3 | |||
| [ | H | 17.5 ± 1.9 | 5.9 ± 0.8 | 2.6 ± 0.3 | |||
| [ | H | 6.8–7.0 | 1.5–2.0 | ||||
| [ | H | 35.6–55.4 | 28.7–47.5 | 5.9–7.9 | 2.0–3.0 | ||
| [ | H | 22.4–34.7 | 16.8–28.0 | 5.6–7.8 | 2.2–2.8 | ||
| [ | CM | 26.0–42.0 | 4.0–8.5 | 20.0–38.0 | 5.4–6.3 | 1.6–2.0 | |
1 H = host; CM = culture media.
Hirsutella citriformis geographic distribution.
| Country | Region | Reference |
|---|---|---|
|
| Jovellanos, Matanzas | [ |
| Carmelina in Cienfuegos; Morón and Ceballos in Ciego de Ávila; San Antonio de los Baños in La Habana | Cabrera et al., 2004, cited by [ | |
| Jaguey El Grande, Matanzas | [ | |
|
| Los Hornos and La Plata, Buenos Aires | [ |
|
| Hawaii | [ |
| Polk, Marion, and Hendry, Florida | [ | |
| Indian River, Florida | [ |
Hirsutella citriformis isolation reports from different insects belonging to the Hemiptera order.
| Parasitized Insect (Family) | Location | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Fulgoridea family Latreille | New Zeeland | [ |
| New Zeeland | ||
| Hawaii | ||
| Hawaii | ||
| Pentatomidae family Leach | India | [ |
| Puerto Rico | Gregory & Martorell 1940, cited by [ | |
| United States | [ | |
| United States | [ | |
| Malaysia | [ | |
| Argentina | [ | |
| [ | ||
| Rénion island, France | [ | |
| Cuba | [ | |
| [ | ||
| Indonesia | [ | |
| Isla Guadalupe | [ | |
| Florida | [ | |
| Veracruz, MX | [ | |
| Tamaulipas, MX | [ | |
| Tamaulipas, MX | [ | |
| Veracruz & Puebla, MX | [ | |
| Veracrux, MX | [ | |
| Campeche, MX | [ | |
| Colima, MX | ||
| Chiapas, MX | ||
| Quintana Roo, MX | ||
| San Luis Potosí, MX | ||
| Tabasco, MX | ||
| Veracruz, MX | ||
| Yucatán, MX | ||
| Hidalgo, MX | Pérez-González et al., (unpublished data) | |
| Oaxaca, MX |
States and municipalities of Mexico reporting Hirsutella citriformis.
| State | Municipality | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Campeche | Edzna | [ |
| Chiapas | Tapachula | [ |
| Colima | Tecomán | [ |
| Hidalgo | Santa Ana | Pérez-González et al., (unpublished data) |
| Oaxaca | Melchor Ocampo | Pérez-González et al., (unpublished data) |
| Puebla | La Legua and La Garita | [ |
| Quintana Roo | Nuevo Israel | [ |
| San Luis Potosí | Xolol | [ |
| Tabasco | Huimanguillo | [ |
| Tamaulipas | Rio Bravo | [ |
| Gómez Farías and Llera | [ | |
| Veracruz | Tlapacoyan | [ |
| Troncones, Ixtacuaco and El Lindero | [ | |
| Tuxpan | [ | |
| Yucatán | Mococha | [ |
Figure 3Hirsutella thompsonii mode of action.
Toxins produced by Hirsutella species.
| Toxin | Type of Toxin | Toxin Size/Yield | Activity | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hirsutellin A | Dot-blot anti HtA | 16.3 kDa/0.12 mg/mL | Insecticidal vs. | [ | |
|
| Hirsutellin A | Ribotoxin | 130 amino-acids | Insecticidal vs. | [ |
| Hirsutellin A | Dot-blot anti HtA | 16 kDa | Insecticidal vs. | [ | |
|
| Culture exudates | Phomalactones? | Undetermined | Reduces eggs production in mites | [ |
|
| Hnsp | SAAPF-pNA protease activity & others | 30 kDa | Nematicide | [ |
|
| Hirsutellin A | W Blot NH2 terminal | 16 kDa | Insecticidal vs. | [ |
|
| Hirsutellin A | Ribotoxin | 130 aa | Unidentified | [ |
|
| Hirsutellin A | Dot-blot anti HtA | 481–936 ng/mL | Insecticidal vs. | [ |
| Hirsutellones A, B, C and D | Alkaloids | 29.9, 1696, 22.6 and 15.7 mg/L | Antibacterial against | [ | |
| Unidentified sp. | Exo-polysaccharide (EPS) | Mannose (man), galactose (gal), glucose (glc) | 23 kDa | Gram (+) bacteria, | [ |
|
| EPS | EPS 1 y 2: gal, glc, man | EPS1 = 43 kDa | Potential to eliminate hydroxyl radicals | [ |
| Intracellular polysaccharide | IPS 1 y 2: gal, glc, man | IPS1 = 23.1 kDa | Potential to eliminate hydroxyl radicals | [ | |
|
| EPS | Polysaccharides (65–70%) + protein (25%) | 5 kDa–200 kDa | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Mucilage from aerial conidia | Protein content, oligo-saccharides + man | 0.12 mg/mL | Insecticidal vs. | [ | |
|
| Culture supernatant | Benzene and phthalic acid | Unidentified | Insecticidal activity | [ |
Figure 4Different exudates produced by Mexican Hirsutella citriformis strains grown on potato dextrose agar supplemented with 0.1% yeast extract (PDAY). (A) H. citriformis strain producing mostly light brown exudates and (B) H. citriformis strain producing (a) deep brown, (b) crystalline, and (c) light brown exudates.
Figure 5Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of a Mexican Hirsutella citriformis strain sample. Lane 1 = mycelium; lane 2 = supernatant; lane 3 = mycelium; lane 4S = gummous material dissolved in solvent and sonicated (five pulses/40 W/30 sec). This material was slightly fragmented; lane 4C = the gummous material was cut, and a fragment was directly deposited as sample; lane 5 = solvent. Note that samples dissolved in a solvent were off the gel lane.