Toxin Production in Soybean (Glycine max L.) Plants with Charcoal Rot Disease and by Macrophomina phaseolina, the Fungus that Causes the Disease

Toxins (Basel). 2019 Nov 6;11(11):645. doi: 10.3390/toxins11110645.

Abstract

Charcoal rot disease, caused by the fungus Macrophomina phaseolina, results in major economic losses in soybean production in southern USA. M. phaseolina has been proposed to use the toxin (-)-botryodiplodin in its root infection mechanism to create a necrotic zone in root tissue through which fungal hyphae can readily enter the plant. The majority (51.4%) of M. phaseolina isolates from plants with charcoal rot disease produced a wide range of (-)-botryodiplodin concentrations in a culture medium (0.14-6.11 µg/mL), 37.8% produced traces below the limit of quantification (0.01 µg/mL), and 10.8% produced no detectable (-)-botryodiplodin. Some culture media with traces or no (-)-botryodiplodin were nevertheless strongly phytotoxic in soybean leaf disc cultures, consistent with the production of another unidentified toxin(s). Widely ranging (-)-botryodiplodin levels (traces to 3.14 µg/g) were also observed in the roots, but not in the aerial parts, of soybean plants naturally infected with charcoal rot disease. This is the first report of (-)-botryodiplodin in plant tissues naturally infected with charcoal rot disease. No phaseolinone was detected in M. phaseolina culture media or naturally infected soybean tissues. These results are consistent with (-)-botryodiplodin playing a role in the pathology of some, but not all, M. phaseolina isolates from soybeans with charcoal rot disease in southern USA.

Keywords: LC/MS; charcoal rot disease; fungi; mycotoxins; phaseolinone; root infection mechanism; soybean.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Ascomycota / growth & development*
  • Ascomycota / metabolism
  • Furans / metabolism*
  • Glycine max / metabolism
  • Glycine max / microbiology*
  • Mycotoxins / metabolism*
  • Plant Diseases / microbiology*
  • Plant Roots / microbiology

Substances

  • Furans
  • Mycotoxins
  • botryodiplodin