4.6 Article

Effects of Durum Wheat Cultivars with Different Degrees of FHB Susceptibility Grown under Different Meteorological Conditions on the Contamination of Regulated, Modified and Emerging Mycotoxins

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9020408

Keywords

3-acetyldeoxynivalenol; deoxynivalenol; deoxynivalenol-3-glucoside; enniatins; moniliformin; zearalenone

Categories

Funding

  1. Syngenta Italia S.p.A
  2. MycoKey project Integrated and Innovative Key Actions for Mycotoxin Management in the Food and Feed Chain (EU Project H2020) [GA 678781]

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Enhancing FHB resistance in wheat is an effective method to reduce mycotoxin contamination. The study found that wheat genotypes with high deoxynivalenol tolerance can minimize sanitary risks, with the most FHB resistant genotypes showing the lowest contamination levels of various mycotoxins. An inverse relationship between deoxynivalenol amount and ratios of other mycotoxins was observed across all wheat cultivars and years.
The enhancement of Fusarium head blight (FHB) resistance is one of the best options to reduce mycotoxin contamination in wheat. This study has aimed to verify that the genotypes with high tolerance to deoxynivalenol could guarantee an overall minimization of the sanitary risk, by evaluating the contamination of regulated, modified and emerging mycotoxins on durum wheat cvs with different degrees of FHB susceptibility, grown under different meteorological conditions, in 8 growing seasons in North-West Italy. The years which were characterized by frequent and heavy rainfall in spring were also those with the highest contamination of deoxynivalenol, zearalenone, moniliformin, and enniatins. The most FHB resistant genotypes resulted in the lowest contamination of all the mycotoxins but showed the highest deoxynivalenol-3-glucoside/deoxynivalenol ratio and moniliformin/deoxynivalenol ratio. An inverse relationship between the amount of deoxynivalenol and the deoxynivalenol-3-glucoside/deoxynivalenol ratio was recorded for all the cvs and all the years. Conversely, the enniatins/deoxynivalenol ratio had a less intense relationship with cv tolerance to FHB. In conclusion, even though the more tolerant cvs, showed higher relative relationships between modified/emerging mycotoxins and native/target mycotoxins than the susceptible ones, they showed lower absolute levels of contamination of both emerging and modified mycotoxins.

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