Phytotoxins Produced by Fungi Associated with Grapevine Trunk Diseases

Publication date

2011-12-20



Abstract

Up to 60 species of fungi in the Botryosphaeriaceae family, genera Cadophora, Cryptovalsa, Cylindrocarpon, Diatrype, Diatrypella, Eutypa, Eutypella, Fomitiporella, Fomitiporia, Inocutis, Phaeoacremonium and Phaeomoniella have been isolated from decline-affected grapevines all around the World. The main grapevine trunk diseases of mature vines are Eutypa dieback, the esca complex and cankers caused by the Botryospheriaceae, while in young vines the main diseases are Petri and black foot diseases. To understand the mechanism of these decline-associated diseases and the symptoms associated with them, the toxins produced by the pathogens involved in these diseases were isolated and characterised chemically and biologically. So far the toxins of only a small number of these decline fungi have been studied. This paper presents an overview of the toxins produced by the most serious of these vine wood pathogens: Eutypa lata, Phaeomoniella chlamydospora, Phaeoacremonium aleophilum and some taxa in the Botryosphaeriaceae family, and examines how these toxins produce decline symptoms. The chemical structure of these metabolites and in some cases their vivotoxin nature are also discussed.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

37

Publisher

MDPI

Published in

Toxins

Recommended citation

Andolfi, Anna, Laura Mugnai, Jordi Luque, Giuseppe Surico, Alessio Cimmino, and Antonio Evidente. 2011. «Phytotoxins Produced By Fungi Associated With Grapevine Trunk Diseases». Toxins 3 (12): 1569-1605. doi: 10.3390/toxins3121569

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Attribution 4.0 International

This item appears in the following Collection(s)