Location > Home > RESEARCH OUTPUTS > RESEARCH

RESEARCH

Bis-naphthopyrone pigments protect filamentous ascomycetes from a wide range of predators——Prof. Chen Wei’s Team Published a Research Paper in the Journal of Nature Communications

by , 2019-08-08.

On August 08, 2019, Prof. Chen Wei’s team of our college cooperated with Prof. Petr Karlovsky’s team of University of Gottingen, Germany, and published a paper entitled “Bis-naphthopyrone pigments protect filamentous ascomycetes from a wide range of predators” in the journal of Nature Communications. This study suggests that fungal bis-naphthopyrone pigments which are widespread among ascomycetes protect fungi from predators by exerting antifeedant effects on a wide range of phylogenetically distant arthropods.

It is thought that fungi protect themselves from predation by the production of compounds that are toxic to soil-dwelling animals. Here, we show that a nontoxic pigment, the bis-naphthopyrone aurofusarin, protects Fusarium fungi from a wide range of animal predators. We find that springtails (primitive hexapods), woodlice (crustaceans), and mealworms (insects) prefer feeding on fungi with disrupted aurofusarin synthesis, and mealworms and springtails are repelled by wheat flour amended with the fungal bis-naphthopyrones aurofusarin, viomellein, or xanthomegnin. Predation stimulates aurofusarin synthesis in several Fusarium species and viomellein synthesis in Aspergillus ochraceus. Aurofusarin displays low toxicity in mealworms, springtails, isopods, Drosophila, and insect cells, contradicting the common view that fungal defence metabolites are toxic. Their research indicated that bis-naphthopyrones are defence compounds that protect filamentous ascomycetes from predators through a mechanism that does not involve toxicity.

Corresponding authors of this paper were Professor Chen Wei from Zhejiang University and Professor Petr Karlovsky from the University of Gottingen in Germany. Part of the research was supported by Professors Marko Rohlfs of the University of Bremen and Wilhelm Schafer of the University of Hamburg in Germany. This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and the German Research Foundation.

Link to the article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-11377-5

  • 866 Yuhangtang Road · Hangzhou · Zhejiang Province· China

  • Tel : +86-571-88982192

Copyright © 2018 College Of Education ,Zhejiang University.All Rights Reserved

228734 visits