Interfungal antagonism between Trichoderma and Fusarium proliferatum — metabolomic and DNA-based analyses
Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2025
Author
Modrzewska, Marta
Popowski, Dominik
Błaszczyk, Lidia
Stępień, Łukasz
Urbaniak, Monika
Bryła, Marcin
Faculty
Wydział Leśny i Technologii Drewna
Journal
Journal of Applied Genetics
ISSN
1234-1983
Volume
66
Number
4
Pages from-to
1079-1095
Abstract (EN)
This study evaluated the antagonistic capacity of eight Trichoderma isolates against two Fusarium proliferatum isolates that differed in their toxigenic potential. Using co-cultures on solid and liquid media, significant variability in antifungal efficacy was observed among Trichoderma species. T. atroviride and T. viridescens isolates demonstrated the highest antagonistic activity, with markedly stronger inhibition of the less toxigenic F. proliferatum isolate. Quantitative PCR analysis confirmed a reduction in Fusarium biomass, which closely correlated with decreased levels of fumonisins (FB1, FB2, FB3) and beauvericin, as determined by UHPLC-HRMS. Notably, the most effective Trichoderma isolates (AN153, AN215, AN523) consistently suppressed both fungal growth and mycotoxin biosynthesis. Although fumonisin levels were reduced in co-cultures, independent assays in FB1-supplemented liquid media indicated that Trichoderma did not directly degrade mycotoxin. The presence of selected secondary metabolites, including 6-pentyl-2H-pyrone and phenolic acids, was confirmed in co-culture extracts. These findings highlight the isolate-specific nature of Trichoderma–Fusarium interactions and emphasise the potential of selected Trichoderma isolates as biocontrol agents capable of simultaneously limiting pathogen growth and mycotoxin accumulation. Further mechanistic studies are warranted to identify the molecular basis of these antagonistic effects.
License
CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives
Open access date
September 26, 2025