Endophytic species of Induratia from coffee and carqueja plants from Brazil and its potential for the biological control of toxicogenic fungi on coffee beans by means of antimicrobial volatiles
Several endophytic fungi have been reported to have produced bioactive metabolites. Some of them, including the Induratia species, have the capacity to emit volatile compounds with antimicrobial properties with broad spectrum against human and plant pathogens. The present study aimed to prospect the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Brazilian journal of microbiology 2023-03, Vol.54 (1), p.349-360 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Several endophytic fungi have been reported to have produced bioactive metabolites. Some of them, including the
Induratia
species, have the capacity to emit volatile compounds with antimicrobial properties with broad spectrum against human and plant pathogens. The present study aimed to prospect the
Induratia
species producing volatile organic compounds (VOCs), in carqueja plants used in alternative medicine and coffee plants in Brazil. A total of 11 fungal isolates producing volatile metabolites were obtained by a parallel growth technique, using
I. alba
620 as a reference strain. Phylogenetic relationships revealed the presence of at least three distinct species,
I. coffeana
,
I. yucatanensis
, and
Induratia
sp. SPME/GC/MS analyses of the VOCs in the headspace above the mycelium from
Induratia
species cultured for 10 days on PDA revealed the volatile profile emitted by
I. coffeana
CCF 572,
I. coffeana
COAD 2055,
I
.
yucatanensis
COAD 2062, and
Induratia
sp. COAD 2059. Volatile organic compounds produced by
I. coffeana
isolates presented antimicrobial activity against
Aspergillus ochraceus
,
A. sclerotiorum
,
A. elegans
,
A. foetidus
,
A. flavus
,
A. tamari
,
A. tubingensis
,
A. sydowii
,
A. niger
,
A. caespitosus
,
A. versicolor
, and
A. expansum
, sometimes by decreasing the growth rate or, mainly, by fully inhibiting colony growth. Fifty-eight percent of the target species died after 6 days of exposure to VOCs emitted by
I. coffeana
CCF 572. In addition, VOCs emitted by the same fungus inhibited the growth in
A. ochraceus
inoculated into coffee beans, which indicates that plants which have
I. coffeana
as an endophyte may be protected from attacks by this plant pathogen. |
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ISSN: | 1517-8382 1678-4405 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s42770-022-00887-y |