Sarocladium and Lecanicillium Associated with Maize Seeds and Their Potential to Form Selected Secondary Metabolites

Biomolecules. 2021 Jan 13;11(1):98. doi: 10.3390/biom11010098.

Abstract

The occurrence and diversity of Lecanicillium and Sarocladium in maize seeds and their role in this cereal are poorly understood. Therefore, the present study aimed to investigate Sarocladium and Lecanicillium communities found in endosphere of maize seeds collected from fields in Poland and their potential to form selected bioactive substances. The sequencing of the internally transcribed spacer regions 1 (ITS 1) and 2 (ITS2) and the large-subunit (LSU, 28S) of the rRNA gene cluster resulted in the identification of 17 Sarocladium zeae strains, three Sarocladium strictum and five Lecanicillium lecanii isolates. The assay on solid substrate showed that S. zeae and S. strictum can synthesize bassianolide, vertilecanin A, vertilecanin A methyl ester, 2-decenedioic acid and 10-hydroxy-8-decenoic acid. This is also the first study revealing the ability of these two species to produce beauvericin and enniatin B1, respectively. Moreover, for the first time in the present investigation, pyrrocidine A and/or B have been annotated as metabolites of S. strictum and L. lecanii. The production of toxic, insecticidal and antibacterial compounds in cultures of S. strictum, S. zeae and L. lecanii suggests the requirement to revise the approach to study the biological role of fungi inhabiting maize seeds.

Keywords: Lecanicillium lecanii; Sarocladium strictum; Sarocladium zeae; bioactive compounds; maize seed-associated fungi; mycotoxins.

MeSH terms

  • Hypocreales / growth & development
  • Hypocreales / isolation & purification
  • Hypocreales / physiology*
  • Mycotoxins / biosynthesis
  • Secondary Metabolism*
  • Seeds / microbiology*
  • Species Specificity
  • Zea mays / microbiology*

Substances

  • Mycotoxins