Applied Mycology Group, Environment and AgriFood Theme, Cranfield University, Cranfield, UK.
Applied Mycology Group, Environment and AgriFood Theme, Cranfield University, Cranfield, UK.
Int J Food Microbiol. 2024 May 2;416:110658. doi: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2024.110658. Epub 2024 Mar 7.
Fusarium asiaticum is a predominant fungal pathogen causing Fusarium Head Blight (FHB) in wheat and barley in China and is associated with approximately £201 million in annual losses due to grains contaminated with mycotoxins. F. asiaticum produces deoxynivalenol and zearalenone whose maximum limits in cereals and cereals-derived products have been established in different countries including the EU. Few studies are available on the ecophysiological behaviour of this fungal pathogen, but nothing is known about the impact of projected climate change scenarios on its growth and mycotoxin production. Therefore, this study aimed to examine the interacting effect of i) current and increased temperature (25 vs 30 °C), ii) drought stress variation (0.98 vs 0.95 water activity; a) and iii) existing and predicted CO concentrations (400 vs 1000 ppm) on fungal growth and mycotoxin production (type B trichothecenes and zearalenone) by three F. asiaticum strains (CH024b, 82, 0982) on a wheat-based matrix after 10 days of incubation. The results showed that, when exposed to increased CO concentration (1000 ppm) there was a significant reduction of fungal growth compared to current concentration (400 ppm) both at 25 and 30 °C, especially at 0.95 a. The multi-mycotoxin analysis performed by LC-MS/MS qTRAP showed a significant increase of deoxynivalenol and 15-acetyldeoxynivalenol production when the CH024b strain was exposed to elevated CO compared to current CO levels. Zearalenone production by the strain 0982 was significantly stimulated by mild water stress (0.95 a) and increased CO concentration (1000 ppm) regardless of the temperature. Such results highlight that intraspecies variability exist among F. asiaticum strains with some mycotoxins likely to exceed current EU legislative limits under prospected climate change conditions.
亚洲镰刀菌是一种主要的真菌病原体,可导致中国小麦和大麦的赤霉病(FHB),并与因真菌毒素污染而导致的每年约 2.01 亿英镑的损失有关。亚洲镰刀菌产生脱氧雪腐镰刀菌烯醇和玉米赤霉烯酮,欧盟等不同国家已经制定了谷物和谷物衍生产品中这两种真菌毒素的最大限量。关于这种真菌病原体的生态生理行为的研究很少,但对于预测气候变化对其生长和真菌毒素产生的影响还一无所知。因此,本研究旨在检查当前和升高的温度(25 与 30°C)、干旱胁迫变化(0.98 与 0.95 水活度(a)以及现有和预测的 CO 浓度(400 与 1000ppm)对三种亚洲镰刀菌菌株(CH024b、82、0982)在基于小麦的基质上的真菌生长和真菌毒素(B 型单端孢霉烯族化合物和玉米赤霉烯酮)产生的相互作用效应,孵育 10 天后进行分析。结果表明,与当前 CO 浓度(400ppm)相比,当暴露于升高的 CO 浓度(1000ppm)时,在 25 和 30°C 下,尤其是在 0.95 a 时,真菌生长明显减少。通过 LC-MS/MS qTRAP 进行的多真菌毒素分析表明,与当前 CO 水平相比,CH024b 菌株在暴露于升高的 CO 时,脱氧雪腐镰刀菌烯醇和 15-乙酰脱氧雪腐镰刀菌烯醇的产量显著增加。0982 菌株的玉米赤霉烯酮产量无论温度如何,均受到轻度水分胁迫(0.95 a)和 CO 浓度升高(1000ppm)的显著刺激。这些结果表明,亚洲镰刀菌菌株之间存在种内变异性,一些真菌毒素可能会超过当前欧盟立法在预期气候变化条件下的限量。