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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Dawson, Georgia » National Peanut Research Laboratory » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #294730

Title: Sexual reproduction in Aspergillus flavus sclerotia naturally produced in corn

Author
item Horn, Bruce
item Sorensen, Ronald - Ron
item Lamb, Marshall
item Sobolev, Victor
item OLARTE, RODRIGO - North Carolina State University
item WORTHINGTON, CAROLYN - North Carolina State University
item CARBONE, IGNAZIO - North Carolina State University

Submitted to: Phytopathology
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 10/1/2013
Publication Date: 12/11/2013
Citation: Horn, B.W., Sorensen, R.B., Lamb, M.C., Sobolev, V., Olarte, R.A., Worthington, C.J., Carbone, I. 2014. Sexual reproduction in Aspergillus flavus sclerotia naturally produced in corn. Phytopathology. 104(10:75-85.

Interpretive Summary: Aspergillus flavus is a mold that contaminates crops with aflatoxin in the field and during storage. Aflatoxin is responsible for major worldwide economic losses due to the costs associated with the monitoring for the toxin and the rejection of crops destined for human consumption and animal feed. Populations of A. flavus are characterized by high genetic variation and the source of this variation is likely sexual reproduction. However, it is not known whether A. flavus can reproduce sexually in the field. In this study, the structures associated with sexual reproduction (sclerotia) were harvested from corn and incubated on nonsterile soil in the laboratory. Viable sexual spores formed in up to 6.1% of the sclerotia. This capacity for sexual reproduction suggests that nontoxin-producing biological control strains of A. flavus may mate with native toxin-producing strains and produce novel offspring that differ in aflatoxin production.

Technical Abstract: Aspergillus flavus is the major producer of carcinogenic aflatoxins worldwide in crops. Populations of A. flavus are characterized by high genetic variation and the source of this variation is likely sexual reproduction. The fungus is heterothallic and laboratory crosses produce ascospore-bearing ascocarps embedded within sclerotia. However, the capacity for sexual reproduction in sclerotia naturally formed in crops has not been examined. Corn was grown for three years under different levels of drought stress at Shellman, Georgia, USA, and sclerotia were recovered from 146 ears (0.6% of ears). Sclerotia of A. flavus L strain were dominant in 2010 and 2011 and sclerotia of A. flavus S strain were dominant in 2012. The incidence of S strain sclerotia in corn ears increased with decreasing water availability. Ascocarps were not detected in sclerotia at harvest, but incubation of sclerotia on the surface of nonsterile soil in the laboratory resulted in the formation of viable ascospores in A. flavus L and S strains and in homothallic A. alliaceus. Ascospores were produced by section Flavi species in 6.1% of the 6,022 sclerotia (18 of 84 ears) in 2010, 0.1% of the 2,846 sclerotia (3 of 36 ears) in 2011, and 0.5% of the 3,106 sclerotia (5 of 26 ears) in 2012. For sexual reproduction to occur under field conditions, sclerotia may require an additional incubation period on soil following dispersal at crop harvest.