Abstracts
The ergot disease of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), caused by the fungus Claviceps sorghi, restricted to the Indian sub-continent, is a disease in which the pathogen infects the florets, colonizing the unfertilized ovaries. Losses are higher in hybrid seed production fields due to a higher susceptibility of male sterile lines. The sclerotia of C. sorghi have never been found to contain alkaloids with a tetracyclic ergoline ring system, which is normal in most ergot pathogens. In this work, we show that sclerotia of C. sorghi contain caffeine alkaloid and the ability to produce it in vitro.
in vitro growth; sclerotia; alkaloid; Sorghum bicolor
A doença ergot do sorgo (Sorghum bicolor), causada pelo fungo Claviceps sorghi, restrito ao Sub-continente Indiano, é uma doença na qual o patógeno infeta a flor, colonizando o ovário não fecundado. Os prejuízos são maiores em lavouras produtoras de sementes de híbridos, em razão do uso de linhas macho-estéreis, que são mais suscetíveis à doença. Em esclerócios de C. sorghi, nunca foi encontrado nenhum tipo de alcalóide com sistema de anéis de ergolina tetracíclico, os quais são muito comuns nos patógenos das doenças ergot. Neste trabalho, é relatado que esclerócios de C. sorghi contêm o alcalóide cafeína e apresentam a capacidade de produzi-lo in vitro.
COMUNICAÇÕES / COMMUNICATIONS
Production of caffeine alkaloid by Claviceps sorghi
Produção do alcalóide cafeína por Claviceps sorghi
Amauri BogoI; Peter Gregory MantleII; Mari Inês C. BoffI; Cassandro V. T. do AmaranteI
ICentro de Ciências Agroveterinárias/CAV, Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina/UDESC. Cx. Postal 281, CEP 88520-000, Lages, SC, e-mail: a2ab@cav.udesc.br
IIBiochemistry Department, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London, SW7-2AY, UK
ABSTRACT
The ergot disease of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), caused by the fungus Claviceps sorghi, restricted to the Indian sub-continent, is a disease in which the pathogen infects the florets, colonizing the unfertilized ovaries. Losses are higher in hybrid seed production fields due to a higher susceptibility of male sterile lines. The sclerotia of C. sorghi have never been found to contain alkaloids with a tetracyclic ergoline ring system, which is normal in most ergot pathogens. In this work, we show that sclerotia of C. sorghi contain caffeine alkaloid and the ability to produce it in vitro.
Additional keywords:in vitro growth, sclerotia, alkaloid, Sorghum bicolor.
RESUMO
A doença ergot do sorgo (Sorghum bicolor), causada pelo fungo Claviceps sorghi, restrito ao Sub-continente Indiano, é uma doença na qual o patógeno infeta a flor, colonizando o ovário não fecundado. Os prejuízos são maiores em lavouras produtoras de sementes de híbridos, em razão do uso de linhas macho-estéreis, que são mais suscetíveis à doença. Em esclerócios de C. sorghi, nunca foi encontrado nenhum tipo de alcalóide com sistema de anéis de ergolina tetracíclico, os quais são muito comuns nos patógenos das doenças ergot. Neste trabalho, é relatado que esclerócios de C. sorghi contêm o alcalóide cafeína e apresentam a capacidade de produzi-lo in vitro.
Sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench], is one of the most important cereal crops in the world, cultivated for food, feed, beverage, and fodder. The most significant technological change in the crop since the 1960s has been the development and use of F1 hybrid seeds, susceptible to the ergot disease caused by Claviceps sorghi McRae (Bandyopadhyay et al., 1998).
Ergot is particularly severe in male-sterile lines when the fungus infects the ovaries. Instead of normal pollination, fertilization, and production of seed, ovaries are colonized by fungal hyphae that develop into spore-bearing fungal masses (Sphacelia), which exudes sweet, stick honeydew droplets as signs of the disease in the field (Bogo, 2001).
The three species of sorghum infecting Claviceps spp. pathogens are distinguished mainly by differences in morphology of ascostroma and sclerotia, and by alkaloid production. C. sorghi, restricted to the Indian Sub-continent, has never been found to contain alkaloids with tetracyclic ergoline ring system, which is normal in most sorghum ergot pathogens.
Caffeine, a notable alkaloid in tea (Camellia sinensis L.) (Theaceae) and coffee (Coffea arabica L.) (Rubiaceae) with important physiological, sociological and commercial implications, is also produced by plants such as "mate" (Ilex paraguariensis St. H.) (Aquifoliaceae), "guaraná" (Paullinia cupana Mart.) (Sapindaceae) and "cola" (Cola acuminata Schott & Endl.) (Sterculiaceae) (Harborne et al., 1999). Recently, caffeine has even been found in anthers of Citrus spp. (Kretschmar & Baumann, 1999). Caffeine is biosynthesised from adenine and methionine in tea (Suzuki & Takahashi, 1976). Fungi have not previously been recognized as having the genome for such types of alkaloidal secondary metabolites, which are unique purine derivatives without a pentose, although Turner (1971) mentions a small group of adenosine derivatives containing a pentose, notably including cordycepin from Cordyceps militaris (Fr.) Link and Aspergillus nidulans Link. Ergot fungi (Claviceps sp.), taxonomically close to Cordyceps sp., usually produce classical ergot alkaloids based on the tetracyclic ergoline ring system. However, analysis of C. sorghi sclerotia and submerged culture identified a polar component as the alkaloid caffeine, which was identified by its characteristic electron impact mass spectrum (GC-MS).
Ergot parasitism
Male-sterile sorghum (IS 2219A) was grown in a horticultural tunnel at the Chelsea Physic Garden, London and flowered in August and September. Inflorescences were inoculated with C. sorghi at floret gaping by spraying diluted natural honeydew. New parasitic sphacelial tissues exuded honeydew one-two weeks after inoculation. Thereafter, they developed the characteristic spur-shaped, grey coloured sclerotia that were collected as host plants entered in senescence.
Media and culture conditions
Cultures of C. sorghi were maintained by subculturing every three weeks to slopes of sucrose/asparagine agar (Castagnoli & Mantle, 1966). Modification of the medium for optimum alkaloid yield in liquid culture resulted in the following defined composition: sucrose, 150 g; L-asparagine, 15 g; KH2PO4, 0.25 g: MgSO4.7H2O, 0.25 g; FeSO4.7H2O, 0.033 g; ZnSO4.7H2O, 0.027 g; distilled water, 1 l: pH 5.5, adjusted with NaOH. Erlenmeyer flasks (500 ml), containing 100 ml medium sterilized at 106 °C for 20 min, were inoculated with 1 to 2 ml of a concentrated suspension of hyphal fragments and conidia obtained by homogenizing mycelium from agar cultures. Only a small proportion of the inoculum floated to the surface thus initiating surface growth, but it was found that the amount of 20-week-old mycelium that could conveniently be removed from a test-tube culture was sufficient when homogenized to inoculate two flasks. Flask cultures were incubated stationarily at 27 °C in the dark. A course of fermentation was followed for 26 days by removing triplicate flasks at intervals, separating the surface mycelium from the culture filtrate and measuring the alkaloid in culture filtrate by the following analytical technique.
Alkaloid extraction
Finely powdered sclerotia and filtrate culture were submitted to a standard ergoline alkaloid extraction procedure and analysis (Mantle & Waight, 1968). Extract was also chromatographed according to Ohmomo (1990). In the specific procedure for caffeine, powdered sclerotia and filtrate culture were extracted exhaustively in CHCl3:MeOH (2:1). The solvents were then evaporated and the solutes treated with petroleum ether (BP 40-60 °C) to dissolve triglyceride oils and ergosterol, and, finally, with a small volume of diethyl ether. Caffeine is only slightly soluble in these solvents. The residue, taken up in CHCl3, was chromatographed preparatively over silica gel (Sil G254, 1mm layer: Camlab) in toluene:EtOAc:HCOOH (15:4:1). The band corresponding to a caffeine standard was eluted with MeOH and evaporated to dryness. The remaining sclerotial powder was treated twice with boiling water to extract further caffeine. Extract was reduced to a small volume and extracted exhaustively with CHCl3. The extract was evaporated to dryness, and resolved chromatographically as above to isolate the caffeine.
Chromatograms of 50 g of powdered sclerotia and 3.5 g (from 100 ml medium) of dry weight mycelium extract at the final stage of the standard extraction process for ergoline alkaloids of sclerotia and culture filtrate of C. sorghi failed to reveal typical Ehrlich-positive ergoline alkaloids. However, the polar component of a UV254-absorbing band near the origin of the chromatogram gave an electron impact mass spectrum (Figure 1A) which was identical to that of a reference sample of caffeine (Figure 1B). The accurate mass of the molecular ion (m/z 194.0820) corresponded to C8H10N402 (calculated mass 194.0804) and the compound co-chromatographed with caffeine in TLC. The next most important fragment ion (m/z 109.0656) corresponded to C5H7N3 (calculated mass 109.0613), involving a loss of C3H3NO2 from the molecular ion.
Caffeine was also recognized by GC-MS (Fisons MD 800) as corresponding to the authentic compound, using a small amount of initial extract from the chromatogram band, the process followed the steps of sclerotial and culture filtrate extraction for ergot alkaloid involving diethyl ether; partition into dilute tartaric acid and, after adjusting to alkaline pH, partition into CHCl3; and, finally, evaporation to dryness and dissolution in hexane (100 µl). The total amount of caffeine was estimated from a closely matched GC-MS total ion current yield from 1 µg of caffeine injected also in 1µl of hexane.
The band corresponding to caffeine, eluted with MeOH, gave 200 µg of white crystalline product per 3.5 g of dry weight mycelium extract and 4.2 mg per 50 g of powdered sclerotia. GC-MS (Micromass Autospek Q) analysis proved purity and confirmed mass spectral data for caffeine (Figure1B).
To insure that all caffeine was extracted, the remained sclerotial powdered material and dry mycelium were re-extracted twice with boiling water, evaporated to a small volume and extracted exhaustively with CHCl3. Extracted solutes were chromatographed preparatively over silica gel to afford more caffeine, giving a total yield of 16.6 mg (4.2 + 12.4 mg) caffeine from 50 g sclerotia (0.03% w/w; cf. typical ergoline alkaloid content of C. purpurea (Fr.) Tul. sclerotia 0.2 - 0.5%). and any trace of caffeine from 3.5 g of dry mycelium.
The finding of caffeine, not only as a fungal metabolite but also as a significant natural product of an ergot fungus, adds to the range of alkaloidal biosynthesis within the Clavicipitaceae, but it is not yet known whether the pathway is the same as in plants. Our additional finding of caffeine production in submerged fermentation of this fungus may facilitate such study. It also confirms that a host plant is not the source of sclerotial caffeine. Within the current natural ergot pathogens of sorghum, caffeine is therefore a valuable diagnostic feature for parasitic C. sorghi sclerotial tissue, as dihydroergosine is for C. africana Frederickson, Mantle, and de Milliano and paliclavine is for C. sorghicola Tsukiboshi, Shimanuki, and Uematasu.
The anamorph of the three Claviceps species cited above is Sphacelia sorghi McRae that is morphologically indistinguishable between them, and it is important not to be confused by literature in which C. africana seems to have been misnamed as C. sorghi (Bandyopadhyay et al., 1990; Ferreira & Casela, 1995). The three species are distinguished by their teleomorph morphology and also by molecular characters, as recently demonstrated by Pazoutova & Bogo (2001). There is a need to re-examine the taxonomy and variation of the Claviceps species based on alkaloid production and using a large number of isolates from different geographic areas in order to determine the genetic relationships among them. Whereas C. sorghi is highly infective of a male-sterile form as shown in the present study, agronomic loss in seed yield does not seem to be due tzo toxigenicity of any sclerotial contaminant.
LITERATURE CITED
Accepted to publication on 27/03/2003
Corresponding author: Amauri Bogo
References
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Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
17 Sept 2003 -
Date of issue
Aug 2003
History
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Accepted
27 Mar 2003