Differences in the Production of Extracellular Polymeric Substances (EPS) and Other Metabolites of Plenodomus (Leptosphaeria) Infecting Winter Oilseed Rape (Brassica napus L.)

Metabolites. 2023 Jun 17;13(6):759. doi: 10.3390/metabo13060759.

Abstract

Species of the genus Plenodomus (Leptosphaeria) are phytopathogens of the Brassicaceae family, which includes oilseed rape. The spores of these fungi spread by airborne transmission, infect plants, and cause crop losses. The secondary metabolism of P. lingam and P. biglobosus was studied and compared, with the main focus being on the ability to produce Extracellular Polymeric Substances (EPS). In spite of the 1.5-2-fold faster growth rate of P. biglobosus on Czapek-Dox and other screening media, the average yield of EPS in this fungus was only 0.29 g/L, compared to that of P. lingam (0.43 g/L). In turn, P. biglobosus showed a higher capacity to synthesise IAA, i.e., 14 µg/mL, in contrast to <1.5 µg/mL produced by P. lingam. On the other hand, the P. lingam strains showed higher β-glucanase activity (350-400 mU/mL), compared to 50-100 mU/mL in P. biglobosus. Invertase levels were similar in both species (250 mU/mL). The positive correlation between invertase activity and EPS yield contrasted with the absence of a correlation of EPS with β-glucanase. Plenodomus neither solubilised phosphate nor used proteins from milk. All strains showed the ability to synthesise siderophores on CAS agar. P. biglobosus exhibited the highest efficiency of amylolytic and cellulolytic activity.

Keywords: IAA; Plenodomus (Leptosphaeria); enzyme activity; exopolysaccharide; extracellular polymeric substance (EPS); invertase; siderophore; winter oilseed rape; β-glucanase.

Grants and funding

Research supported by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Poland as part of the statutory activities of the Department of Industrial and Environmental Microbiology, Maria Curie–Skłodowska University. The plant screening was funded by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development under the programme “Biological Progress”, project for the years 2021–2026, topic 25 “Resistance of oilseed rape to diseases caused by fungi and protists”.