4.6 Review

Gliotoxin - bane or boon?

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 1096-1109

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.13080

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Funding

  1. excellence graduate school Jena School for Microbial Communication - Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
  2. International Leibniz Research School for Microbial and Biomolecular Interactions
  3. DFG [CRC/Transregio 124]
  4. Head of NABT Division, BARC

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Gliotoxin (GT) is the most important epidithiodioxopiperazine (ETP)-type fungal toxin. GT was originally isolated from Trichoderma species as an antibiotic substance involved in biological control of plant pathogenic fungi. A few isolates of GT-producing Trichoderma virens are commercially marketed for biological control and widely used in agriculture. Furthermore, GT is long known as an immunosuppressive agent and also reported to have anti-tumour properties. However, recent publications suggest that GT is a virulence determinant of the human pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus. This compound is thus important on several counts - it has medicinal properties, is a pathogenicity determinant, is a potential diagnostic marker and is important in biological crop protection. The present article addresses this paradox and the ecological role of GT. We discuss the function of GT as defence molecule, the role in aspergillosis and suggest solutions for safe application of Trichoderma-based biofungicides.

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