Data underpinning the paper: Intra-species variability in Fusarium langsethiae strains in growth and T-2/HT-2 mycotoxin production in response to climate change abiotic factors.

  1. Verheecke, Carol
  2. lopez-pietro, alejandro
  3. Garcia Cela, Esther
  4. Medina Vaya, Angel
  5. Magan, Naresh

Editor: Cranfield Online Research Data (CORD)

Ano de publicación: 2021

Tipo: Dataset

CC BY 4.0

Resumo

The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential intra-species variability of 3 Fusarium langsethiae strains inresponse to extreme climate change (CC) conditions on an oat-based matrix. The impact of elevated temperature(25 vs 30-34 °C) coupled with increasing drought stress (0.98 vs 0.95 aw ) and elevated CO2 (400 vs 1000 ppm) were examined on lag phases prior to growth, growth rate, and production of the mycotoxins T-2 and HT-2 and theirratio. In comparison to the control conditions (25 °C; 0.98; 400 ppm), exposure to increased temperature (30-34 °C), showed similar reductions in the lag phase and fungal growth rates of all 3 strains. However, with elevatedCO2 a reduction in both lag phases prior to growth and growth rate occurred regardless of the aw examined. ForT-2 and HT-2 mycotoxin production, T-2 showed the most intra-species variability in response to the interactingabiotic stress factors, with the 3 strains having different environmental conditions for triggering increases in T-2production: Strain 1 produced higher T-2 toxin at 25 °C, while Strain 2 and the type strain (Fl201059) producedmost at 0.98 aw /30 °C. Only Strain 2 showed a reduction in toxin production when exposed to elevated CO2 . HT-2 production was higher at 25 °C for the type strain and higher at 30-34 °C for the other two strains, regardless of the aw orCO2 level examined. The HT-2/T-2 ratio showed no significant differences due to the imposed interactingCC abiotic conditions.<br>