4.6 Article

Protocooperative Effect of Sphaerodes mycoparasitica Biocontrol and Crop Genotypes on FHB Mycotoxin Reduction in Bread and Durum Wheat Grains Intended for Human and Animal Consumption

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms11010159

Keywords

Fusarium Head Blight; common; bread wheat; durum wheat; deoxynivalenol; mycotoxins; biocontrol; mycoparasite; Sphaerodes mycoparasitica; FHB management; protocooperation; FHB resistance

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The occurrence of Fusarium Head Blight (FHB) mycotoxins in wheat grains poses a major threat to global food safety. This study demonstrates that the use of a specific mycoparasite biocontrol agent effectively reduces the occurrence of FHB mycotoxins in harvested wheat grains. The results suggest that this biocontrol agent could be a safe and promising alternative for minimizing FHB mycotoxins in cereal grain intended for human and animal consumption.
The occurrence of Fusarium Head Blight (FHB) mycotoxins in wheat grains is a major threat to global food safety and security. Humans and animals are continuously being exposed to Fusarium mycotoxins such as deoxynivalenol (DON) and its acetylated derivatives 3ADON and 15ADON through the ingestion of contaminated food or grain-based diet. In this study, a host-specific mycoparasite biocontrol agent (BCA), Sphaerodes mycoparasitica, significantly reduced FHB mycotoxin occurrence in harvested wheat grains from Fusarium graminearum 3ADON chemotype infected plants in greenhouse. Four genotypes of wheat, two common wheat and two durum wheat cultivars with varying FHB resistance levels were used in this study. Principal Coordinate Analysis (PCoA) using Illumina ITS sequences depicted beta diversity changes in Fusarium species indicating that both plant cultivar and BCA treatments influenced the Fusarium species structure and mycotoxin occurrence in grains. Fusarium graminearum complex (cluster A), F. avenaceum and F. acuminatum (cluster B), and F. proliferatum (cluster C) variants were associated with different FHB mycotoxins based on LC-MS/MS analyses. The predominant FHB mycotoxins measured were DON and its acetylated derivatives 3ADON and 15ADON. The BCA reduced the occurrence of DON in grains of all four cultivars (common wheat: 1000-30,000 mu g center dot kg(-1).; durum wheat: 600-1000 mu g center dot kg(-1)) to levels below the Limit of Quantification (LOQ) of 16 mu g center dot kg(-1). A relatively higher concentration of DON was detected in the two common wheat genotypes when compared to the durum wheat genotype; however, the percentage reduction in the wheat genotypes was greater, reaching up to 99% with some S. mycoparasitica treatments. Similarly, a higher reduction in DON was measured in susceptible genotypes than in resistant genotypes. This study's findings underscore the potential of a Fusarium-specific S. mycoparasitica BCA as a safe and promising alternative that can be used in conjunction with other management practices to minimize FHB mycotoxins in cereal grain, food and feed intended for human and animal consumption.

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