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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2007, p. 637-642, Vol. 73, No. 2
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.01440-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Molecular Phytopathology and Mycotoxin Research, Goettingen University, Grisebachstrasse 6, D-37077 Goettingen, Germany
Received 22 June 2006/ Accepted 8 November 2006
Zearalenone is a mycotoxin with estrogenic effects on mammals that is produced by several species of Fusarium. We found that zearalenone and its derivatives inhibit the growth of filamentous fungi on solid media at concentrations of
10 µg/ml. The fungitoxic effect declined in the order zearalenone >
-zearalenol > ß-zearalenol. The mycoparasitic fungus Gliocladium roseum produces a zearalenone-specific lactonase which catalyzes the hydrolysis of zearalenone, followed by a spontaneous decarboxylation. The growth of G. roseum was not inhibited by zearalenone, and the lactonase may protect G. roseum from the toxic effects of this mycotoxin. We inactivated zes2, the gene encoding zearalenone lactonase in G. roseum, by inserting a hygromycin resistance cassette into the coding sequence of the gene by means of Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated genetic transformation. The zes2 disruption mutants could not hydrolyze the lactone bond of zearalenone and were more sensitive to zearalenone. These data are consistent with a hypothesis that resorcylic acid lactones exemplified by zearalenone act to reduce growth competition by preventing competing fungi from colonizing substrates occupied by zearalenone producers and suggest that they may play a role in fungal defense against mycoparasites.
Published ahead of print on 17 November 2006.
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