Growth and Secondary Metabolites
Beside
aggressiveness on oilseed rape A- and B-type isolates of Phoma lingam
can be distinguished by cultural traits. Production of secondary
metabolites is a very useful criterion. However, A- and B-type also
differ significantly with regard to radial growth on different media
(refer to the upper left figures). A more rapid growth can be attributed
to B-type-isolates (blue lines) compared to A-type isolates (red
lines), which is even more pronounced on more nutrient poor media
(comparison of malt ectract -upper chart- and vegetable-8 juice -lower
chart). Data shown indicated the growth of A- and B-type reference
isolates over a time period of 23 days. Radial growth is plotted on the
y-axis. Looking at the figures showing A-type (left petri dish) and
B-type (right petri dish) a pronounced branched growth of A-type
isolates becomes obvious. However, due to variation of radial growth
this trait is not very reliable for differentiation.
Of much
better value is the trait pigment production in liquid medium, even
there is also variation with at least respect to quantity of pigments.
After 3-5 weeks of cultivation a brownish discolorisation of the media
becomes obvious varying from light brown to dark brown. As seen in the
bottom left figure all B-type isolates shown here (6 in number) display
discolorization. The two A-type isolates (2nd and forth from the right)
only show original color of the Czapek Dox culture filtrate. All
isolates so far tested in our laboratory (several hundreds) possess the
negative correlation between pigment production and aggressiveness on
oilseed rape.
The correlation is positive considering the
production of the host unspecific phytotoxins sirodesmins, which belongs
to the chemical family of dioxo-piperazines. In other words A-type
isolates produce sirodesmins but do not produce pigments and B-types
vice versa. Sirodesmin production can be seen from the TLC-analysis
shown here. After ethyl acetate extraction of the culture filtrates
sirodesmins can be stained by AgNO3. Staining shows six sirodesmin
derivates visiable as brownish bands. Analysed were two A-type isolates
starting at the left of the TLC plate, followed by two B-type and an
A-type isolate, clearly demonstrating this difference.
The property
of sirodesmin production was used by a French group headed by
Marie-Hélène Balesdent und Thierry Rouxel, who raised the terms TOX+
(A-types) and TOX- (B-types) (Balesdent et al. 1992). Even in this case
we now know that these terms are also oversimplifing, due to other
phytotoxins produced by B-type isolates. The terms SIRO+ and SIRO-0
should be mor appropriate instead. Work published by the Canadian
biochemist Soledade Pedras and her polish colleague Piotr Kachlichki
showed that phytotoxic compounds are produced by B-type isolates.
Connected to this we should state from work of our own group that
sirodesmins should not be considered as pathogenecity factors. Instead
they should be considered as virulence factors (or better aggressiveness
factors) because Sock & Hoppe (1999) showed that UV knock down
mutants (factor 1,000 -10,000) were still pathogenic but showed
significantly reduced lesions sizes on stems and cotyledons.