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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2000, p. 1120-1125, Vol. 66, No. 3
Centre de Bioingénierie Gilbert Durand
UMR-CNRS 5504, UR-INRA 792, Institut National des Sciences
Appliquées de Toulouse, Complexe Scientifique de Rangueil, 31077 Toulouse,1 and Laboratoire SPCMIB,
Groupe de Chimie Organique Biologique, Université Paul Sabatier,
Toulouse,2 France
Received 27 July 1999/Accepted 9 December 1999
During submerged culture in the presence of glucose and glutamate,
the filamentous fungus Monascus ruber produces
water-soluble red pigments together with citrinin, a mycotoxin with
nephrotoxic and hepatoxic effects on animals. Analysis of the
13C-pigment molecules from mycelia cultivated with
[1-13C]-, [2-13C]-, or
[1,2-13C]acetate by 13C nuclear magnetic
resonance indicated that the biosynthesis of the red pigments used both
the polyketide pathway, to generate the chromophore structure, and the
fatty acid synthesis pathway, to produce a medium-chain fatty acid
(octanoic acid) which was then bound to the chromophore by a
trans-esterification reaction. Hence, to enhance pigment
production, we tried to short-circuit the de novo synthesis of
medium-chain fatty acids by adding them to the culture broth. Of fatty
acids with carbon chains ranging from 6 to 18 carbon atoms, only
octanoic acid showed a 30 to 50% stimulation of red pigment
production, by a mechanism which, in contrast to expectation, did not
involve its direct trans-esterification on the chromophore
backbone. However, the medium- and long-chain fatty acids tested were
readily assimilated by the fungus, and in the case of fatty acids
ranging from 8 to 12 carbon atoms, 30 to 40% of their initial amount
transiently accumulated in the growth medium in the form of the
corresponding methylketone 1 carbon unit shorter. Very interestingly,
these fatty acids or their corresponding methylketones caused a strong
reduction in, or even a complete inhibition of, citrinin production by
M. ruber when they were added to the medium. Several data
indicated that this effect could be due to the degradation of the newly
synthesized citrinin (or an intermediate in the citrinin pathway) by
hydrogen peroxide resulting from peroxisome proliferation induced by
medium-chain fatty acids or methylketones.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Medium-Chain Fatty Acids Affect Citrinin Production
in the Filamentous Fungus Monascus ruber
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Centre de
Bioingénierie Gilbert Durand UMR-CNRS 5504, UR-INRA 792, Institut
National des Sciences Appliquées de Toulouse, Complexe
Scientifique de Rangueil, 31077 Toulouse cedex 4, France. Phone: 33 5 61 55 94 92. FAX: 33 5 61 55 94 00. E-mail:
fran_jm{at}insa-tlse.fr.
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