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Three Antifungal Proteins From Penicillium expansum: Different Patterns of Production and Antifungal Activity

Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich proteins. Filamentous fungi encode a wide repertoire of AFPs belonging to different phylogenetic classes, which offer a great potential to develop new antifungals for the control of pathogenic fungi. The fun...

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Autores principales: Garrigues, Sandra, Gandía, Mónica, Castillo, Laia, Coca, María, Marx, Florentine, Marcos, Jose F., Manzanares, Paloma
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6182064/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30344516
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.02370
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author Garrigues, Sandra
Gandía, Mónica
Castillo, Laia
Coca, María
Marx, Florentine
Marcos, Jose F.
Manzanares, Paloma
author_facet Garrigues, Sandra
Gandía, Mónica
Castillo, Laia
Coca, María
Marx, Florentine
Marcos, Jose F.
Manzanares, Paloma
author_sort Garrigues, Sandra
collection PubMed
description Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich proteins. Filamentous fungi encode a wide repertoire of AFPs belonging to different phylogenetic classes, which offer a great potential to develop new antifungals for the control of pathogenic fungi. The fungus Penicillium expansum is one of the few reported to encode three AFPs each belonging to a different phylogenetic class (A, B, and C). In this work, the production of the putative AFPs from P. expansum was evaluated, but only the representative of class A, PeAfpA, was identified in culture supernatants of the native fungus. The biotechnological production of PeAfpB and PeAfpC was achieved in Penicillium chrysogenum with the P. chrysogenum-based expression cassette, which had been proved to work efficiently for the production of other related AFPs in filamentous fungi. Western blot analyses confirmed that P. expansum only produces PeAfpA naturally, whereas PeAfpB and PeAfpC could not be detected. From the three AFPs from P. expansum, PeAfpA showed the highest antifungal activity against all fungi tested, including plant and human pathogens. P. expansum was also sensitive to its self-AFPs PeAfpA and PeAfpB. PeAfpB showed moderate antifungal activity against filamentous fungi, whereas no activity could be attributed to PeAfpC at the conditions tested. Importantly, none of the PeAFPs showed hemolytic activity. Finally, PeAfpA was demonstrated to efficiently protect against fungal infections caused by Botrytis cinerea in tomato leaves and Penicillium digitatum in oranges. The strong antifungal potency of PeAfpA, together with the lack of cytotoxicity, and significant in vivo protection against phytopathogenic fungi that cause postharvest decay and plant diseases, make PeAfpA a promising alternative compound for application in agriculture, but also in medicine or food preservation.
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spelling pubmed-61820642018-10-19 Three Antifungal Proteins From Penicillium expansum: Different Patterns of Production and Antifungal Activity Garrigues, Sandra Gandía, Mónica Castillo, Laia Coca, María Marx, Florentine Marcos, Jose F. Manzanares, Paloma Front Microbiol Microbiology Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich proteins. Filamentous fungi encode a wide repertoire of AFPs belonging to different phylogenetic classes, which offer a great potential to develop new antifungals for the control of pathogenic fungi. The fungus Penicillium expansum is one of the few reported to encode three AFPs each belonging to a different phylogenetic class (A, B, and C). In this work, the production of the putative AFPs from P. expansum was evaluated, but only the representative of class A, PeAfpA, was identified in culture supernatants of the native fungus. The biotechnological production of PeAfpB and PeAfpC was achieved in Penicillium chrysogenum with the P. chrysogenum-based expression cassette, which had been proved to work efficiently for the production of other related AFPs in filamentous fungi. Western blot analyses confirmed that P. expansum only produces PeAfpA naturally, whereas PeAfpB and PeAfpC could not be detected. From the three AFPs from P. expansum, PeAfpA showed the highest antifungal activity against all fungi tested, including plant and human pathogens. P. expansum was also sensitive to its self-AFPs PeAfpA and PeAfpB. PeAfpB showed moderate antifungal activity against filamentous fungi, whereas no activity could be attributed to PeAfpC at the conditions tested. Importantly, none of the PeAFPs showed hemolytic activity. Finally, PeAfpA was demonstrated to efficiently protect against fungal infections caused by Botrytis cinerea in tomato leaves and Penicillium digitatum in oranges. The strong antifungal potency of PeAfpA, together with the lack of cytotoxicity, and significant in vivo protection against phytopathogenic fungi that cause postharvest decay and plant diseases, make PeAfpA a promising alternative compound for application in agriculture, but also in medicine or food preservation. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6182064/ /pubmed/30344516 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.02370 Text en Copyright © 2018 Garrigues, Gandía, Castillo, Coca, Marx, Marcos and Manzanares. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Garrigues, Sandra
Gandía, Mónica
Castillo, Laia
Coca, María
Marx, Florentine
Marcos, Jose F.
Manzanares, Paloma
Three Antifungal Proteins From Penicillium expansum: Different Patterns of Production and Antifungal Activity
title Three Antifungal Proteins From Penicillium expansum: Different Patterns of Production and Antifungal Activity
title_full Three Antifungal Proteins From Penicillium expansum: Different Patterns of Production and Antifungal Activity
title_fullStr Three Antifungal Proteins From Penicillium expansum: Different Patterns of Production and Antifungal Activity
title_full_unstemmed Three Antifungal Proteins From Penicillium expansum: Different Patterns of Production and Antifungal Activity
title_short Three Antifungal Proteins From Penicillium expansum: Different Patterns of Production and Antifungal Activity
title_sort three antifungal proteins from penicillium expansum: different patterns of production and antifungal activity
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6182064/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30344516
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.02370
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