Xerophytic Lichens from Gypsiferous Outcrops of Arid Areas of Andalusia as a Source of Anti-Phytopathogenic Depsides
Metadata
Show full item recordMateria
Xerophytic lichens Antifungal activity Biopesticides Fungal phytopathogens Dereplication MS/MS molecular networking Depsides
Date
2023-08-30Referencia bibliográfica
Fernández-Pastor, I.; González-Menéndez, V.; Martínez Andrade, K.; Serrano, R.; Mackenzie, T.A.; Benítez, G.; Casares-Porcel, M.; Genilloud, O.; Reyes, F. Xerophytic Lichens from Gypsiferous Outcrops of Arid Areas of Andalusia as a Source of Anti-Phytopathogenic Depsides. J. Fungi 2023, 9, 887. [https://doi.org/10.3390/jof9090887]
Abstract
In a survey to evaluate the potential of lichens associated with gypsum areas as sources
of new antifungal metabolites, six species of lichens were collected in the gypsum outcrops of the
Sorbas Desert (Diploschistes ocellatus and Seirophora lacunosa) and the Tabernas Desert (Cladonia foliacea,
Acarospora placodiformis, Squamarina lentigera and Xanthoparmelia pokornyi) in southern Spain. Raw
lichen acetone extracts were tested against a panel of seven phytopathogenic fungi, including
Botrytis cinerea, Colletotrichum acutatum, Fusarium oxysporum f.sp cubense TR4, Fusarium ploriferaum,
Magnaporthe grisea, Verticillium dahliae and Zymoseptoria tritici. Active extracts of Cladonia foliacea,
Xanthoparmelia pokornyi and Squamarina lentigera were analyzed by HPLC-MS/MS and Molecular
Networking to identify possible metabolites responsible for the antifungal activity. A total of ten
depside-like metabolites were identified by MS/MS dereplication and NMR experiments, of which
one was a new derivative of fumaroprotocetraric acid. The compounds without previously described
biological activity were purified and tested against the panel of fungal phytopathogens. Herein, the
antifungal activity against fungal phytopathogens of 40-O-methylpaludosic acid, divaricatic acid
and stenosporic acid is reported for the first time. Stenosporic and divaricatic acids displayed a
broad antifungal spectrum against seven relevant fungal phytopathogens in a micromolar range,
including the extremely resistant fungus F. oxysporum f. sp. cubense Tropical Race 4 (TR4). 40-Omethylpaludosic
acid exhibited specific antifungal activity against the wheat pathogen Z. tritici, with
an IC50 of 38.87 g/mL (87.1 M) in the absorbance-based assay and 24.88 g/mL (55.52 M) in the
fluorescence-based assay