Isidro G. Collado
University of Cádiz
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Featured researches published by Isidro G. Collado.
Phytochemistry Reviews | 2007
José L. Reino; Raul F. Guerrero; Rosario Hernández-Galán; Isidro G. Collado
Trichoderma species are free-living fungi that are highly interactive in root, soil and foliar environments and have been used successfully in field trials to control many crop pathogens. Structural and biological studies of the metabolites isolated from Trichoderma species are reviewed. This review, encompassing all the literature in this field up to the present and in which 269 references are cited, also includes a detailed study of the biological activity of the metabolites, especially the role of these metabolites in biological control mechanisms. Some aspects of the biosynthesis of these metabolites and related compounds are likewise discussed.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2005
Verena Siewers; Muriel Viaud; Daniel Jiménez-Teja; Isidro G. Collado; Christian Schulze Gronover; Jean-Marc Pradier; Bettina Tudzynski; Paul Tudzynski
The micrographic phytopathogen Botrytis cinerea causes gray mold diseases in a large number of dicotyledonous crop plants and ornamentals. Colonization of host tissue is accompanied by rapid killing of plant cells ahead of the growing hyphen, probably caused by secretion of nonspecific phytotoxins, e.g., the sesquiterpene botrydial. Although all pathogenic strains tested so far had been shown to secrete botrydial and although the toxin causes comparable necrotic lesions as infection by the fungus, the role of botrydial in the infection process has not been elucidated so far. Here, we describe the functional characterization of bcbot1, encoding a P450 monooxygenase and provide evidence that it is involved in the botrydial pathway, i.e., it represents the first botrydial biosynthetic gene identified. We show that bcbot1 is expressed in planta and that expression in vitro and in planta is controlled by an alpha-subunit of a heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein, BCG1. Deletion of bcbot1 in three standard strains of B. cinerea shows that the effect on virulence (on several host plants) is strain-dependent; only deletion in one of the strains (T4) led to reduced virulence.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2008
Cristina Pinedo; Chieh-Mei Wang; Jean-Marc Pradier; Bérengère Dalmais; Mathias Choquer; Pascal Le Pêcheur; Guillaume Morgant; Isidro G. Collado; David E. Cane; Muriel Viaud
The fungus Botrytis cinerea is the causal agent of the economically important gray mold disease that affects more than 200 ornamental and agriculturally important plant species. B. cinerea is a necrotrophic plant pathogen that secretes nonspecific phytotoxins, including the sesquiterpene botrydial and the polyketide botcinic acid. The region surrounding the previously characterized BcBOT1 gene has now been identified as the botrydial biosynthetic gene cluster.Five genes including BcBOT1 and BcBOT2 were shown by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR to be co-regulated through the calcineurin signaling pathway. Inactivation of the BcBOT2 gene, encoding a putative sesquiterpene cyclase, abolished botrydial biosynthesis, which could be restored by in trans complementation.Inactivation of BcBOT2 also resulted in overproduction of botcinic acid that was observed to be strain-dependent. Recombinant BcBOT2 protein converted farnesyl diphosphate to the parent sesquiterpene of the botrydial biosynthetic pathway, the tricyclic alcohol presilphiperfolan-8beta-ol.
Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2002
Ana Julia Colmenares; Josefina Aleu; Rosa Durán-Patrón; Isidro G. Collado; Rosario Hernández-Galán
Phytotoxic assays, performed both in vitro and in vivo on leaves of Phaseolus vulgaris, with metabolites excreted by the fungus B. cinerea are evaluated. Exogenous application of the phytotoxin botrydial has been found to produce severe chlorosis and cell collapse and facilitated fungal penetration and colonization of plant tissue. The results also show a light-dependent action mechanism for the phytotoxin and seem to indicate that botrydial is a non-host-specific toxin involved in fungal infection of B. cinerea.
Phytochemistry | 2001
Nigel Deighton; Ingo Muckenschnabel; Ana Julia Colmenares; Isidro G. Collado; Brian Williamson
The fungal metabolite botrydial was detected for the first time in ripe fruits of sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum) wound-inoculated with conidial suspensions of Botrytis cinerea and also in leaves of Phaseolus vulgaris and Arabidopsis thaliana inoculated without wounding. This phytotoxin was produced in soft rot regions of the infection. In C. annuum, the most aggressive isolate produced the highest botrydial concentrations in planta. The levels of botrydial produced by this isolate did not correlate with the reported relative susceptibilities of four P. vulgaris genotypes. The results suggest that botrydial is a pathogenicity factor for this fungus, but not a primary determinant of pathogenicity.
Molecular Plant Pathology | 2011
Bérengère Dalmais; Julia Schumacher; Javier Moraga; Pascal Le Pêcheur; Bettina Tudzynski; Isidro G. Collado; Muriel Viaud
The grey mould fungus Botrytis cinerea produces two major phytotoxins, the sesquiterpene botrydial, for which the biosynthesis gene cluster has been characterized previously, and the polyketide botcinic acid. We have identified two polyketide synthase (PKS) encoding genes, BcPKS6 and BcPKS9, that are up-regulated during tomato leaf infection. Gene inactivation and analysis of the secondary metabolite spectra of several independent mutants demonstrated that both BcPKS6 and BcPKS9 are key enzymes for botcinic acid biosynthesis. We showed that BcPKS6 and BcPKS9 genes, renamed BcBOA6 and BcBO9 (for B. cinerea botcinic acid biosynthesis), are located at different genomic loci, each being adjacent to other putative botcinic acid biosynthetic genes, named BcBOA1 to BcBOA17. Putative orthologues of BcBOA genes are present in the closely related fungus Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, but the cluster organization is not conserved between the two species. As for the botrydial biosynthesis genes, the expression of BcBOA genes is co-regulated by the Gα subunit BCG1 during both in vitro and in planta growth. The loss of botcinic acid production does not affect virulence on bean and tomato leaves. However, double mutants that do not produce botcinic acid or botrydial (bcpks6Δbcbot2Δ) exhibit markedly reduced virulence. Hence, a redundant role of botrydial and botcinic acid in the virulence of B. cinerea has been demonstrated.
Current Organic Chemistry | 2009
Cristina Pinedo-Rivilla; Josefina Aleu; Isidro G. Collado
One of the major problems facing the industrialized world today is the contamination of soils, ground water, sediments, surfacewater and air with hazardous and toxic chemicals. The application of microorganisms which degrade or transform hazardous organic contaminants to less toxic compounds has become increasingly popular in recent years. This review, with approximately 300 references covering the period 2005-2008, describes the use of fungi as a method of bioremediation to clean up environmental pollutants.
Natural Product Reports | 2007
Isidro G. Collado; Antonio José Macías Sánchez; James R. Hanson
The structures and biosynthesis of the sesquiterpenoid metabolites of Botrytis cinerea and their relationship to the presilphiperfolanes are reviewed. The development of a novel strategy for the control of this phytopathogenic fungus based on analogues of these metabolites is described. There are 75 references.
Journal of Natural Products | 2011
Ahlem Hamdache; Ahmed Lamarti; Josefina Aleu; Isidro G. Collado
Bacillus species produce a number of non-peptide metabolites that display a broad spectrum of activity and structurally diverse bioactive chemical structures. Biosynthetic, biological, and structural studies of these metabolites isolated from Bacillus species are reviewed. This contribution also includes a detailed study of the activity of the metabolites described, especially their role in biological control mechanisms.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2009
María Belén Rubio; Rosa Hermosa; José L. Reino; Isidro G. Collado; Enrique Monte
We describe the cloning and characterization of the Trichoderma harzianum Thctf1 gene, which shows high sequence identity with a transcription factor gene of Fusarium solani f. sp. pisi. In T. harzianum, disruption of the Thctf1 gene by homologous recombination gave rise to transformants that in plate experiments did not show the yellow pigmentation observed in the wild-type strain. In several Trichoderma spp. a yellow pigmentation and a coconut aroma have been related to the production of 6-pentyl-2H-pyran-2-one (6PP) compounds. Prompted by this, we explored whether the loss of pigmentation in the Thctf1 null mutants of T. harzianum might be related to the synthesis of 6PP. Chromatographic and spectroscopic analyses revealed that the disruptants did not produce two secondary metabolites, derived from 6PP and not previously described in the Trichoderma genus, that are present in wild-type culture filtrates. Since 6PP is a recognized antifungal compound, this ability was analyzed in both the disruptants and wild-type, observing that the Thctf1 null mutants of T. harzianum had reduced antimicrobial capacity. Our results point to the significant role of THCTF1 in the production of secondary metabolites and in the antifungal activity of T. harzianum.