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Title: PROGRESS IN UNDERSTANDING THE BIOSYNTHESIS AND REGULATION OF FUMONISINS IN FUSARIUM VERTICILLIOIDES

Author
item Plattner, Ronald
item Proctor, Robert
item Brown, Daren
item Desjardins, Anne

Submitted to: Aflatoxin Workshop
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 10/27/2000
Publication Date: N/A
Citation: N/A

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Fumonisins are a family of toxic fungal metabolites produced by Fusarium verticillioides, a fungus frequently found in corn worldwide. F. verticillioides has been associated with stalk, root and kernel rots in corn. It is also among the most common fungi found even in symptomless corn plants and is considered by some to be an endophyte of corn. Most isolates produce primarily FB1 with lesser amounts of FB2, FB3 and FB4. Much less common are isolates that produce no FB1 but accumulate high levels of FB2 and FB4 or FB3 and FB4. Only a very few isolates have been isolated that do not produce any measurable fumonisins when grown on corn in the laboratory. Classical genetic analysis of these isolates has identified three closely linked loci (fum1, fum2, fum3) that control fumonisin production. A polyketide synthase (PKS) gene, FUM5, required for fumonisin biosynthesis was identified and cloned using a PCR approach with degenerate PKS primers and cDNA from a fumonisin producing culture of F. verticillioides. Transformation of a fumonisin non producing (fum1-) strain with a cosmid containing FUM5 restored fumonisin production. At least some of the fumonisin production genes are clustered in F. verticillioides. Several open reading frames (ORF's) up and downstream from FUM5 have been identified. Four of these ORF's are highly correlated with fumonisin expression.