A survey, carried out in Southern Italy on fungi colonizing oilseed rape (Brassicae napua L subspoleifera DC) in the field, showedAlternaria alternata (Fries) Keissler as one of the predominant species. 11 strains ofAlternaria alternata isolated from oilseed rape were cultured on rice to test the ability to produce mycotoxins. All strains produced mycotoxins, including tenuazonic acid (up to 12,000mg/kg), alternariol (up to 200mg/kg), alternariol mortomethyl ether (up to 200mg/kg), altertoxin-l (2 to 250mg/kg), and altertoxin-ll (2 to 70mg/kg). Culture extracts containing tenuazonic acid were toxic toArtemia salina and inhibited seedling growth of oilseed rape. Little or no activity with the same bioassays was shown by culture extracts containing the remaining mycotoxins. No mycotoxins were detected in 16 samples of oilseed rape from processing factories.
Five of 11 isolates of Stemphylium botryosum Wallr. from oilseed rape produced the phytotoxin stemphol when cultured on rice, with yields varying from 15.0 to 98.4 mg/kg, and three of them also produced the toxin on Czapek Dox (CD) liquid medium supplemented with cations (0.12-0.31 mg/L) and potato-dextrose (PD) broth (0.37-1.47 mg/L). In liquid cultures about 95% of stemphol was found in the mycelium, and toxin production was slightly increased when cultures were exposed to near UV light rather than being grown in the dark. The LD50 concentrations for stemphol against isolated cells of oilseed rape and chickpea were 8.4 and 7.0 microM, respectively. One isolate of S. majusculum (strain no. 135459) produced much greater amounts of stemphol, i.e., 22.8 mg/L, 535.3 mg/L, and 548 mg/kg when grown on CD, PD, and rice, respectively. Leaves of oilseed rape, artificially infected with S. majusculum and bearing lesions that occupied an average of 70% of the lamina contained 0.9 microgram stemphol per gram dry weight of leaf tissue.
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