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MINI REVIEW article

Front. Microbiol., 21 July 2014
Sec. Food Microbiology
This article is part of the Research Topic Global health issues of aflatoxins in food and agriculture: Challenges and opportunities View all 14 articles

Biodiversity of Aspergillus section Flavi in Europe in relation to the management of aflatoxin risk

\r\nGiancarlo PerroneGiancarlo Perrone1Antonia GalloAntonia Gallo2Antonio F. Logrieco*Antonio F. Logrieco1*
  • 1Institute of Sciences of Food Production, National Research Council, Bari, Italy
  • 2Unit of Lecce, Institute of Sciences of Food Production, National Research Council, Lecce, Italy

Aflatoxins and the producing fungi Aspergillus section Flavi are widely known as the most serious and dangerous mycotoxin issue in agricultural products. In Europe, before the outbreak of aflatoxins on maize (2003–2004) due to new climatic conditions, their contamination was confined to imported foods. Little information is available on molecular biodiversity and population structure of Aspergillus section Flavi in Europe. Preliminary reports evidenced the massive presence of Aspergillus flavus L -morphotype as the predominant species in maize field, no evidence of the highly toxigenic S-morphotype and of other aflatoxigenic species are reported. The risk of a shift in traditional occurrence areas for aflatoxins is expected in the world and in particular in South East of Europe due to the increasing average temperatures. Biological control of aflatoxin risk in the field by atoxigenic strains of A. flavus starts to be widely used in Africa and USA. Studies are necessary on the variation of aflatoxin production in populations of A. flavus to characterize stable atoxigenic A. flavus strains. The aim of present article is to give an overview on biodiversity and genetic variation of Aspergillus section Flavi in Europe in relation to the management of aflatoxins risk in the field.

Introduction

The relatively recent outbreak of aflatoxins risk contamination in Europe has driven the EU researchers to investigate on this topic usually confined to tropical and sub-tropical areas. In this respect, aflatoxins and aflatoxigenic fungi are by far the most serious, dangerous and studied mycotoxin issue in agricultural products.

Aflatoxins are secondary metabolites synthesized by several Aspergillus species and are highly toxic to humans and animals when ingested at high concentrations. They may cause severe liver damage accompanied by jaundice, hepatitis and death, especially in developing countries (Probst et al., 2007). In addition, they are genotoxic, carcinogenic, and teratogenic for both humans and animals. Daily consumption of foods contaminated with low levels of aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) can result in chronic aflatoxicosis with stunting in children, immune suppression, cancer, and reduced life expectancy (Shephard, 2008).

Aflatoxins could extensively contaminate pre-harvest corn, cotton, soybean, peanuts, and tree nuts, and in addition residues from contaminated feed may appear in milk (Bennett and Klich, 2003).

In general, and in most of the published studies, A. flavus and A. parasiticus are the major prominent species associated in aflatoxin contamination of agricultural crops. However, recently additional species of Section Flavi have been reported to be responsible of aflatoxin contamination, i.e., A. arachidicola in peanuts and A. nomius in corn, nuts, and brazil nuts, especially in certain geographical area (Varga et al., 2011). New aflatoxigenic species A. mottae, A. sergii and A. transmontanensis have been described from maize and almonds in Portugal, they all belong to A. parasiticus group (Soares et al., 2012). A. flavus isolates produce AFB1 and AFB2 and often cyclopiazonic acid (CPA), while most A. parasiticus strains produce AFG1 and AFG2 in addition to AFB1 and AFB2 but never produce CPA (Horn and Dorner, 1999). Production in A. flavus is highly variable and depends on genotype, substrate and geographic origin, climate change and agronomic practice. Moreover, A. flavus is considered the predominant contaminating organism in soil and in agricultural areas and this species is more invasive and out competes A. parasiticus when both species are together in soil. So, most of the extensive researches have been conducted on this species and on its diverse assemblage of strains: different vegetative compatibility groups (VCGs), sclerotial type variants, toxigenic and atoxigenic strains (Ehrlich, 2014). In fact, A. flavus populations include isolates with two morphologically distinct sclerotial size variants, L strains with average sclerotial size >400 μm and S strains with sclerotial size <400 μm. Both these morphotypes are found in maize regions around the world; L strains are usually less toxigenic than S strains and produce only AFBs, while S strains are often high producer of aflatoxins and could be divided in two chemotypes: the SBG producing both AFBs and AFGs, and the SB producing only AFBs. The closely related new species A. parvisclerotigenus and A. minisclerotigenes were potentially associated to the SBG and SB taxons of A. flavus, respectively (Saito and Tsuruta, 1993; Pildain et al., 2008). Isolates that share morphological characters with SBG have been reported from Thailand, Argentina, and Australia, but the exact taxonomic designation of SBG remains unclear (Cotty and Cardwell, 1999; Donner et al., 2009). More recently, Probst et al. (2012) assigned four phylogenetic distinct groups to the S strains: one seems to belong to A. minisclerotigenes (SBG from Australia, Nigeria, Argentina, USA); the second is the highly toxic Kenyan SB group (Probst et al., 2007), and a third is the SB group from elsewhere in the world, e.g., Thailand, United States, and Philippines. Finally, there is the SBG strain group from Nigeria. In general, members of the SBG group are found in locations where high levels of aflatoxin contamination occur.

It is important to underline that, based on actual surveys, the Europe population of A. flavus seems constituted only by L strains, none of the studies conducted have found A. flavus S strains. In Europe, the occurrence of A. parasiticus in maize seems to be very rare, while it resulted more distributed in almond especially in Portugal with an atypical chemotype producing only AFBs toxins (Rodrigues et al., 2011).

Incidence of aflatoxin outbreaks are most severe in tropical and subtropical areas around the world and also temperate regions, such as the United States Midwest are subject to occurrence of aflatoxin contamination. Until 2004, the European perspective regarding aflatoxin contamination was confined to imported foods such as peanut cake, palm kernel, copra, and corn gluten meal (depending of origin; European Food Safety Authority [EFSA], 2004). Several surveys have been conducted for detection of AFs in feed samples in Europe founding a small percentage of materials contaminated with AFB1 concentration above the regulatory limit. In fact, a survey of 110 maize samples in Northern Italy in 2003, initially planned to monitor the occurrence of fumonisins, showed 75% positive samples to AFBs with a mean of 4.4 and a maximum of 154.5 μg/kg (Piva et al., 2006). In 2006, aflatoxin contaminated rice meal used in dairy cattle feed production had been identified as the cause of elevated AFM1 levels in Swedish milk.

However, a big survey conducted by European Food Safety Authority [EFSA] (2007) evidenced the emerging issue of potential aflatoxin contamination of corn, almonds, pistachios grown in areas of Southern Europe, due to the subtropical climate occurring in some recent years. In the study of Ibáñez-Vea et al. (2012), detectable levels of AFB1 were reported for all the 123 Spanish barley samples from 2007 to 2008, and it was found to co-occur with other mycotoxins like ochratoxin A and zearalenone. In the recent work of Streit et al. (2013), samples of feed and feed raw materials from over the world were analyzed during an 8 year period for contamination with different mycotoxins. Regarding aflatoxin contamination, European samples originated primarily from Central Europe showed a high percentage of around 30% positive samples, albeit the pool of samples tested was made up by finished feeds or imported feedstuffs for more than half. A recent warning for maize contamination in Northern Italy was issued in 2012–2013 in consequence of drought conditions favorable to A. flavus infection (Andreotti, 2013; Causin, 2013).

In the following chapters of this mini-review we intend to analyze the most important critical points that should be studied and keep under audit to prevent and reduce the spreading of aflatoxin risk in Europe in the next decades.

Climate Change and Risk of Aflatoxin Contamination in Europe

A wide body of evidence demonstrates that the ability of fungi to grow, survive and interact with a large variety of crop species and to produce mycotoxins is greatly influenced by environmental factors, mainly temperature, relative humidity, insects. These factors are greatly related to climate change and to the variation of temperature and rainfalls. In this sense, food safety has become a very important issue worldwide and the potential effects of climate change on yields and quality of food crops, especially for mycotoxins, have received special attention in the last years, in particular from a risk analysis perspective (Miraglia et al., 2009; Magan et al., 2011). A shift in traditional occurrence areas for mycotoxins is to be expected due to the increasing average temperatures. In this respect, the Mediterranean zones have been identified as a climate change hotspot where extreme changes in temperature, CO2 levels and rainfall patterns are predicted. Regarding aflatoxins, their contamination events are more prevalent during times of high heat and drought, which may stress the host plant thereby facilitating A. flavus infection (Schmidt-Heydt et al., 2009; Mohale et al., 2013).

In 2003 and sporadically in the following years a hot and drying season led to severe A. flavus infection of maize in Northern Italy, as mentioned above (Piva et al., 2006; Battilani et al., 2008). The use of this maize as feedstuff for dairy cattle led to a widespread AFM1 contamination in milk and several thousands of tons of milk exceeding the EU legal limit of 0.05 μg/kg had to be discarded. In the 2 years following this incidence from the study of Decastelli et al. (2007) the presence of AFM1 in milk and AFB1 in feed was higher than the maximum allowable in 1.7% of raw milk samples and in 8.1% of feed samples. In 2005, the presence of these aflatoxins was below the limits of EU regulations. So, because of the very dry conditions in those years, A. flavus became a significant problem.

Under heat/drought stress also peanuts and pistachio can develop cracking in pods or hull splitting resulting in a significant increase in aflatoxin contamination (Cotty and Jaime-Garcia, 2007). Drought is also a major stress for the plants and undermines their natural immunity against pathogens like mycotoxin-producing fungi (Bircan et al., 2008; Kebede et al., 2012).

New strategies to monitor and predict mycotoxin contamination, either in specific foods or in geographical regions are of recent development, they could be useful in the next years for identify and predict environmental conditions present in regions that may favor mycotoxin proliferation. In this regard, some models have been created to predict aflatoxin for pistachio nuts (Marín et al., 2012), peanuts (Boken et al., 2008), and other crops (Masuoka et al., 2010). More recently, as in Northern Europe A. flavus became a dominant pathogen in maize, Battilani et al. (2013) have developed a mechanistic model “AFLA-maize” for the prediction of A. flavus infection and AFB1 contamination in this crop.

Another potential consequence of climate change is that the biocontrol strain could be an inadvertent cause of increased damage to the plant, especially if growing conditions are less favorable for cultivation. Changes in soil environment and its microbiome due to temperature increase, could also subject the crop to amplified damage. So, across Europe, it is relevant to improve harmonization of surveillance and monitoring of aflatoxins; improve database on the geographical distribution and prevention methods for aflatoxin; develop models for the prediction of aflatoxin contamination in the new biogeographical agricultural scenarios.

Biodiversity and Genetic Diversity of Aspergillus Section Flavi in Europe

Soil populations of A. flavus are typically composed of isolates from hundreds of different VCGs which reflect phenotypic differences (or similarity) among individuals (Leslie, 1993). Individuals (genotypes) of a fungal species having the same heterokaryon or vegetative incompatibility loci can fuse and undergo genetic exchange through parasexuality (Glass et al., 2000). Fungal isolates that form stable heterokaryons are considered to belong to same VCGs. In A. flavus populations, most of variations in morphology and mycotoxin production can be attributed to differences among VCGs. Vegetative compatibility group was believed to be a strong barrier to genetic exchange but recent studies found that VCGs are able to outcross, leading to new VCGs and thereby increased diversity (Olarte et al., 2012).

Recently, sexual reproduction was demonstrated in A. flavus which resulted to be an heterothallic fungus with two mating type loci, MAT1-1 and MAT1-2 maintained separately in homokaryotic isolates (Ramirez-Prado et al., 2008; Horn et al., 2009). Recombination can occur within conidia or sclerotia when they harbor multiple nuclei of different mating type and thereby capable of recombination.

Sexual recombination occurs in A. flavus through the meiotic process of independent assortment and crossing over that may influence the toxin phenotype of A. flavus strains, with a reduction or a complete loss of toxicity (Olarte et al., 2012). The majority of the genetic variation in mycotoxin production arises from mutations in the aflatoxin biosynthetic gene cluster (Chang et al., 2005, 2006), including gene loss, recombination, DNA inversions, partial deletions, translocations, and other genomic rearrangements of the cluster likely due to proximity of the cluster to the telomeric region of chromosome (Carbone et al., 2007).

Comparative analyses of the aflatoxin cluster in various Aspergillus species have underlined the complex evolutionary history of this cluster and its role in species adaptation and diversification (Ehrlich et al., 2003; Moore et al., 2009). From analyses of Aspergillus populations, several distinct deletions within aflatoxin cluster have been described that may each be responsible for atoxigenicity in various isolates. Either part or the entire biosynthetic cluster resulted deleted, or the non-aflatoxigenicity was associated to inability to amplify selected aflatoxin genes (Chang et al., 2005; Criseo et al., 2008; Donner et al., 2010).

Not many studies on the molecular diversity of Aspergillus populations isolated in Europe are available. Among these, the work of Gallo et al. (2012) was about an A. flavus population isolated from maize in 2003, during the first outbreak of aflatoxin contamination documented in Northern Italy (Piva et al., 2006; Giorni et al., 2007). The strains were analyzed for the presence of seven aflatoxin biosynthesis genes, including the regulatory genes aflR and aflS, in relation to their capability to produce AFB1. All aflatoxin producing isolates exhibited the complete set of amplification products, whereas non-producing isolates did not yield amplified products for three, four or all seven tested genes. The genetic diversity of A. flavus populations collected from maize kernels in Northern Italy from 2003 to 2010 was assessed by analysis of VCG and presence or absence of several aflatoxin genes by Mauro et al. (2013). Forty-eight VCGs were identified by means of complementation between nitrate non-utilizing mutants. Twenty-five of these VCGs contained only atoxigenic isolates and the remaining 23 only aflatoxin producers. In addition six deletion patterns of genes in aflatoxin cluster were detected. Regarding the atoxigenic isolates, 12 of them had no deletion in the cluster, 10 had the entire cluster deleted and only one had a deletion pattern only seen once before in Nigeria, with only two genes amplified out of the thirteen tested.

The genetic variability of aflatoxin cluster in non-aflatoxigenic isolates appears diversified and complex but its understanding is important for the selection of safe and effective non-producing strains potentially usable in biocontrol for limiting aflatoxin contamination.

Atoxigenic Strain and Genetic Variation in Aflatoxin Control Strategy

Interest in the variation of aflatoxin production by strains of Aspergillus section Flavi has increased recently because atoxigenic strains of A. flavus are being used as biological control agents to reduce the risk of aflatoxin contamination (Atehnkeng et al., 2008; Wu and Khlangwiset, 2010). Atoxigenic strains may displace wild-type aflatoxigenic strains in crop environments so only the non-aflatoxigenic population of fungi would be present in the field.

The effectiveness of pre-harvest biocontrol strategies using atoxigenic strains is based on competition for substrate, the potential production of inhibitory metabolites, and on their inability to recombine with native toxigenic strains, thus preventing the reacquisition of aflatoxigenicity (Ehrlich and Cotty, 2004; Abbas et al., 2011). Anyway, the choice of a candidate biocontrol atoxigenic A. flavus strain could not be based only on the phenotypic characteristic of atoxigenicity; it is necessary to investigate the genotypic condition. The long-term effect of atoxigenic biocontrol strains on native population depends on possibility of sexual recombination, in presence of which the high aflatoxin heritability will induce the regaining of ability to produce aflatoxins. There is never complete inheritance of the atoxigenic phenotype in the offspring of a biocontrol parent, so the use of atoxigenic strains biocontrol with lacking cluster genes would be preferable to one with intact biosynthetic cluster (Olarte et al., 2012; Moore, 2014).

Other factors should be considered for a successful application of biocontrol strategy such as the better understanding of natural diversity of A. flavus populations in agricultural soil, the ability of the introduced non-aflatoxigenic strains to recombine with the existing aflatoxigenic strains, the adaptation of A. flavus isolates for growth on the plant, the potential damage to the plant from the introduced strain, the potential effect on the soil microenvironment, the timing and the economical cost of application of biocontrol isolates, the potential production of other toxic metabolites, in addition to aflatoxins, which could affect animal health (Ehrlich, 2014).

This form of competitive exclusion of toxigenic strains by non-aflatoxigenic biocontrol strains has been demonstrated under field conditions in cotton (Cotty, 1994), peanuts (Dorner, 2005; Alaniz Zanon et al., 2013) and maize (Abbas et al., 2006).

The aflatoxigenic isolate AF36, which is unable to produce aflatoxin because of a point mutation in the polyketide synthase gene (pksA) necessary for aflatoxin biosynthesis (Ehrlich and Cotty, 2004), is registered to be used in USA for the management of aflatoxin contamination in cottonseed fields. The strain NRRL21882 is the active ingredient of Afla-Guard, a biocontrol formulation consisting of spore-coated barley seeds and used in peanut fields (Chang and Hua, 2007); the isolate is missing the entire aflatoxin and CPA gene clusters and therefore is unable to produce both mycotoxins (Chang et al., 2005, 2009). Recently the possibility to replace grain seeds in this formulation with bioplastic based granules has been explored in field experiments conducted in Northern Italy showing that bioplastic formulations are effective in reducing aflatoxin contamination in corn (Accinelli et al., 2014). In some cases the competing fungi are used as cocktails that include application of multiple strains of non-aflatoxigenic A. flavus (Wu et al., 2013).

Conclusion

The occurrence of AFB1 at high levels in Europe in the years 2003–2004 and 2012–2013 underlines the fact that the climate change will entail a change in the mycotoxin distribution patterns observed today. Global trade of plant products can also contribute to the spread of aflatoxigenic fungi and to the increase of diversity of local fungal populations. The study of diversity of aflatoxigenic fungi occurring in maize in Europe, under different points of view-morphological, molecular, metabolic, and plant pathological is essential for the development of strategies for the control of aflatoxin contamination. In this regard, the molecular characterization of native atoxigenic strains, acting through competitive exclusion of aflatoxin producers, with superior adaptation to a geographical region, should provide benefit of long-term displacement of toxigenic strains in maize environment. Additional information on the behavior of these atoxigenic isolates in the target agro-ecosystem will be needed to choose the best biological control agents. Finally, the development of predictive models for aflatoxins occurrence based on regional weather data would be a valuable tool to estimate the risk of contamination after a given growing season, together with using biopesticides in the frame of an integrated pest management (IPM).

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgment

This work was partially supported by EU-FPVII project MYCORED (KBBE-2007-222690).

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Keywords: Aspergillus, aflatoxin, genetic variation, climate change, atoxigenic strains, biocontrol

Citation: Perrone G, Gallo A and Logrieco AF (2014) Biodiversity of Aspergillus section Flavi in Europe in relation to the management of aflatoxin risk. Front. Microbiol. 5:377. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00377

Received: 11 June 2014; Paper pending published: 02 July 2014;
Accepted: 04 July 2014; Published online: 21 July 2014.

Edited by:

Mehdi Razzaghi-Abyaneh, Pasteur Institute of Iran, Iran

Reviewed by:

Massimo Reverberi, Università La Sapienza, Italy
Sofia Noemi Chulze, Universidad Nacional de Rio Cuarto, Argentina

Copyright © 2014 Perrone, Gallo and Logrieco. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Antonio F. Logrieco, Institute of Sciences of Food Production, National Research Council, via Amendola 122/O, 70126 Bari, Italy e-mail: antonio.logrieco@ispa.cnr.it

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