Effect of temperature, relative humidity, and incubation time on the mycotoxin production by Fusarium spp. responsible for dry rot in potato tubers

Date published

2024-10-01

Free to read from

2025-01-09

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Volume Title

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MDPI

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Article

ISSN

2072-6651

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Citation

Gutiérrez-Pozo M, Verheecke-Vaessen C, Kourmpetli S, et al., (2024) Effect of temperature, relative humidity, and incubation time on the mycotoxin production by Fusarium spp. responsible for dry rot in potato tubers. Toxins, Volume 16, Issue 10, October 2024, Article number 414

Abstract

Potato is the fourth most consumed crop in the world. More than half of the crop is stored for three to nine months at cold temperatures (3–10 °C) for the fresh and seed market. One of the main causes of fresh potato waste in the retail supply chain is the processing of fungal and bacterial rots during storage. Dry rot is a fungal disease that mainly affects the potato crop during storage and is responsible for 1% of tuber losses in the UK. It is produced by Fusarium spp., such as Fusarium sambucinum and F. oxysporum, which can lead to the accumulation of mycotoxins in the potato tuber. Little is known about the impact of environmental factors on the accumulation of mycotoxins in potato tubers. Understanding the ecophysiology of these fungi is key to mitigating their occurrence under commercial storage conditions. Therefore, this work aimed to elucidate the effect of three different temperatures (5, 10, and 15 °C) and two different water activities (aw; 0.97, 0.99) on the ecophysiology and mycotoxin accumulation of F. sambucinum and F. oxysporum in a potato-based semi-synthetic medium. The mycotoxin accumulation was then studied in vivo, in potato tubers cultivated under organic farming conditions, stored for 40 days at 8.5 °C. Results showed that higher temperatures and aw enhanced fungal growth, lag time, and mycotoxin accumulation in vitro. Growth rate was 2 and 3.6 times higher when the temperature increased from 5 to 10 and 15 °C, respectively. Six different mycotoxins (T-2, HT-2, diacetoxyscirpenol, 15-acetoxyscirpenol, neosolaniol, and beauvericin) were detected in vitro and in vivo. T-2 was the most abundant mycotoxin detected in vitro, observing 106 ng of T-2/g media after 21 days of incubation at 10 °C and 0.99 aw. Due to the long period of time that potato tubers spend in storage, the fluctuations of environmental factors, such as temperature and relative humidity, could promote the development of fungal rot, as well as mycotoxin accumulation. This could result in important food and economic losses for the potato market and a threat to food safety.

Description

Data supporting this study are openly available from CORD, at this link: https://doi.org/10.57996/cran.ceres-2594

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Github

Keywords

ecophysiology, T-2, HT-2, fungal growth, potato storage, 3214 Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences, 32 Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, 2 Zero Hunger, HT-2, T-2, ecophysiology, fungal growth, potato storage, 3214 Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences

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Attribution 4.0 International

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Funder/s

This research was funded by the Interreg North-West Europe program (project number: NWE 363) and BBSRC research grant Oats for the future between the Applied Mycology Group at Cranfield University, UK (BB/P001432/1).