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Bioactive Metabolite Production in the Genus Pyrenophora (Pleosporaceae, Pleosporales)

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxins14090588

Keywords

Pyrenophora; toxins; biological activity; phytotoxicity; pathogenicity; biomolecules

Funding

  1. University of Cadiz [2021-067/PN/MS-RECUAL/CD]
  2. NextGenerationEU program of the European Union

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The genus Pyrenophora includes important cereal crop pathogens and a variety of less known species, many of which are also grass pathogens. Different species of Pyrenophora produce a diverse array of bioactive metabolites through various biosynthetic pathways. These compounds have potential host-specific responses, antifungal activity, phytotoxicity, and antibacterial activity.
The genus Pyrenophora includes two important cereal crop foliar pathogens and a large number of less well-known species, many of which are also grass pathogens. Only a few of these have been examined in terms of secondary metabolite production, yet even these few species have yielded a remarkable array of bioactive metabolites that include compounds produced through each of the major biosynthetic pathways. There is little overlap among species in the compounds identified. Pyrenophora tritici-repentis produces protein toxin effectors that mediate host-specific responses as well as spirocyclic lactams and at least one anthraquinone. Pyrenophora teres produces marasmine amino acid and isoquinoline derivatives involved in pathogenesis on barley as well as nonenolides with antifungal activity, while P. semeniperda produces cytochalasans and sesquiterpenoids implicated in pathogenesis on seeds as well as spirocyclic lactams with phytotoxic and antibacterial activity. Less well-known species have produced some unusual macrocyclic compounds in addition to a diverse array of anthraquinones. For the three best-studied species, in silico genome mining has predicted the existence of biosynthetic pathways for a much larger array of potentially toxic secondary metabolites than has yet been produced in culture. Most compounds identified to date have potentially useful biological activity.

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