Publication Date:
2013
abstract:
Fungal biodiversity is one of the most important contributors to the occurrence and severity of mycotoxin
contamination of crop plants. Phenotypic and metabolic plasticity has enabled mycotoxigenic fungi to colonize
a broad range of agriculturally important crops and to adapt to a range of environmental conditions.
New mycotoxin-commodity combinations provide evidence for the ability of fungi to adapt to changing conditions
and the emergence of genotypes that confer enhanced aggressiveness toward plants and/or altered
mycotoxin production profiles. Perhaps the most important contributor to qualitative differences in mycotoxin
production among fungi is variation in mycotoxin biosynthetic genes. Molecular genetic and biochemical
analyses of toxigenic fungi have elucidated specific differences in biosynthetic genes that are responsible for
intra- and inter-specific differences in mycotoxin production. For Aspergillus and Fusarium, the mycotoxigenic
genera of greatest concern, variation in biosynthetic genes responsible for production of individual families of
mycotoxins appears to be the result of evolutionary adaptation. Examples of such variation have been reported
for: a) aflatoxin biosynthetic genes in Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus; b) trichothecene biosynthetic
geneswithin and among Fusarium species; and c) fumonisin biosynthetic genes in Aspergillus and Fusarium species.
Understanding the variation in these biosynthetic genes and the basis for variation inmycotoxin production
is important for accurate assessment of the risks that fungi pose to food safety and for prevention of mycotoxin
contamination of crops in the field and in storage.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Aflatoxins; Aspergillus; Fumonisins; Fusarium; Trichothecenes; Biosynthetic pathway
List of contributors:
Moretti, Antonio; Susca, Antonia; Logrieco, ANTONIO FRANCESCO; Mule', Giuseppina
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