“…The majority of assessed species from the genus Colletotrichum , a large genus of crop and/or ornamental plant pathogens (Perfect et al, ), were shown to harbour full‐ to partial‐length CTB gene clusters, of which the post‐harvest apple fruit pathogen Co. fioriniae was shown to produce cercosporin (de Jonge et al, ). The core gene of the Cercospora CTB gene cluster is the NR‐PKS gene CTB1 (Newman and Townsend, ), which is flanked by nine genes that encode decorating enzymes (CTB2, CTB3, CTB5, CTB6, CTB7, CTB9, CTB10, CTB11 and CTB12) (de Jonge et al, ). Besides those 10 genes essential for toxin formation, the cluster also encodes a zinc finger transcription factor (CTB8) for regulation of cluster gene expression, and two major facilitator superfamily (MFS) transporters; CTB4 that is necessary for toxin secretion and the cercosporin facilitator protein (CFP) involved in toxin auto‐resistance (Chen et al, ; Choquer et al, ; de Jonge et al, ).…”