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Featured researches published by Mona Torp.


Fungal Biology | 2005

Phylogeny and toxigenic potential is correlated in Fusarium species as revealed by partial translation elongation factor 1 alpha gene sequences

Ralf Kristensen; Mona Torp; Barbara Kosiak; Arne Holst-Jensen

Partial translation elongation factor 1 alpha (TEF-1alpha) gene and intron sequences are reported from 148 isolates of 11 species of the anamorph genus Fusarium; F. avenaceum (syn. F. arthrosporioides), F. cerealis, F. culmorum, F. equiseti, F.flocciferum, F. graminearum, F. lunulosporum, F. sambucinum, F. torulosum, F. tricinctum and F. venenatum. The sequences were aligned with TEF-1alpha sequences retrieved from 35 isolates of F. kyushuense, F. langsethiae, F. poae and F. sporotrichioides in a previous study, and 39 isolates of F. cerealis, F. culmorum, F. graminearum and F. pseudograminearum retrieved from sequence databases. The 222 aligned sequences were subjected to phylogenetic analyses using maximum parsimony and Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo maximum likelihood statistics. Support for internal branching topologies was examined by Bremer support, bootstrap and posterior probability analyses. The resulting trees were largely congruent. The taxon groups included in the sections Discolor, Gibbosum and Sporotrichiella sensu Wollenweber & Reinking (1935) all appeared to be polyphyletic. All species were monophyletic except F. flocciferum that was paraphyletic, and one isolate classified as F. cfr langsethiae on the basis of morphology that grouped with F. sporotrichioides. Mapping of toxin profiles, host preferences and geographic origin onto the DNA based phylogenetic tree structure indicated that in particular the toxin profiles corresponded with phylogeny, i.e. phylotoxigenic relationships were inferred. A major distinction was observed between the trichothecene and non-trichothecene producers, and the trichothecene producers were grouped into one clade of strictly type A trichothecene producers, one clade of strictly type B trichothecene producers and one clade with both type A and type B trichothecene producers. Furthermore, production of the type A trichothecenes T-2/HT-2 toxins are associated with a lineage comprising F. langsethiae and F. sporotrichioides. The ability to produce zearalenone was apparently gained parallel to the ability to produce trichothecenes, and later lost in a derived sublineage. The ability to produce enniatins is a shared feature of the entire study group, with the exception of the strict trichothecene type B producers and F. equiseti. The ability to produce moniliformin seems to be an ancestral feature of members of the genus Fusarium which seems to have been lost in the clades consisting of trichothecene/zearalenone producers. The aims of the present study were to determine the phylogenetic relationships between the different species of Fusarium commonly occurring on Norwegian cereals and some of their closest relatives, as well as to reveal underlying patterns such as the ability to produce certain mycotoxins, geographic distribution and host preferences. Implications for a better classification of Fusarium are discussed and highlighted.


Mycopathologia | 1999

Production of T-2 toxin by a Fusarium resembling Fusarium poae

Mona Torp; Wenche Langseth

A Fusarium species with a micro morphology similar to F. poae and a metabolite profile resembling that of F. sporotrichioides has been identified. Like typical F. poae, the microconidia have a globose to pyriform shape, but the powdery appearance, especially on Czapek-Dox Iprodione Dichloran agar (CZID), less aerial mycelium and the lack of fruity odour on Potato Sucrose Agar (PSA) make it different from F. poae. The lack of macroconidia, polyphialides and chlamydospores differentiates it from F. sporotrichioides. All 18 isolates investigated, 15 Norwegian, two Austrian and one Dutch, produced T-2 toxin (25–400 μg/g) on PSA or Yeast Extract Sucrose agar (YES). In addition, neosolaniol, iso-neosolaniol, HT-2 toxin, 4- and 15-acetyl T-2 tetraol, T-2 triol and T-2 tetraol and4,15-diacetoxyscirpenol were formed in variable amounts. Neither nivalenol, 4- or 15-acetylnivalenolor 4,15-diacetylnivalenol were detected in any of the cultures, while these toxins were produced at least in small amounts by all the 12 typical F. poae isolates studied. The question of whether this Fusarium should be classified as F. poae or F. sporotrichioides or a separate taxon should be addressed.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2004

Fusarium langsethiae sp. nov. on cereals in Europe

Mona Torp; Helgard I. Nirenberg


Food Chemistry | 2006

Beauvericin and enniatins A, A1, B and B1 in Norwegian grain: a survey

Silvio Uhlig; Mona Torp; Berit T. Heier


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2004

Alternaria and Fusarium in Norwegian grains of reduced quality¿a matched pair sample study

Barbara Kosiak; Mona Torp; Eystein Skjerve; Birgitte Andersen


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2004

Phylogenetic analyses of the Fusarium poae, Fusarium sporotrichioides and Fusarium langsethiae species complex based on partial sequences of the translation elongation factor-1 alpha gene

A.K. Knutsen; Mona Torp; Arne Holst-Jensen


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2004

The European Sporotrichiella project: a polyphasic approach to the biology of a new Fusarium species.

Mona Torp; Andreas Adler


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2005

Morphological, chemical and molecular differentiation of Fusarium equiseti isolated from Norwegian cereals

Elzbieta Barbara Kosiak; Arne Holst-Jensen; Thomas Rundberget; María Teresa González Jaen; Mona Torp


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2004

An integrated taxonomic study of Fusarium langsethiae, Fusarium poae and Fusarium sporotrichioides based on the use of composite datasets

Holger Schmidt; Andreas Adler; Arne Holst-Jensen; S.S. Klemsdal; Antonio Logrieco; Robert L. Mach; Helgard I. Nirenberg; Ulf Thrane; Mona Torp; Rudi F. Vogel; Tapani Yli-Mattila; Ludwig Niessen


Journal of Phytopathology | 1997

Toxicity and occurrence of Fusarium species and mycotoxins in late harvested and overwintered grain from Norway, 1993

Wenche Langseth; Barbara Kosiak; P.-E. Clasen; Mona Torp; M. Gareis

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Arne Holst-Jensen

National Veterinary Institute

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Barbara Kosiak

National Veterinary Institute

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Thomas Rundberget

National Veterinary Institute

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Wenche Langseth

National Veterinary Institute

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A.K. Knutsen

National Veterinary Institute

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Berit T. Heier

National Veterinary Institute

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P.-E. Clasen

National Veterinary Institute

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Ralf Kristensen

National Veterinary Institute

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Silvio Uhlig

National Veterinary Institute

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