Inheritance of antagonistic properties and lytic enzyme activities in sexual crosses of Talaromyces flavus
1992
Summary
Two wild-type strains and three benomyl-resistant mutants of the antagonistic ascomycete Talaromyces flavus were crossed in six combinations, two of which yielded hybrid cleistothecia. Parental strains and their ascospore progenies varied in several traits considered to play an important role in the capacity to control soilborne fungal pathogens: extracellular activities of glucose oxidase and cell-wall degrading enzymes, antibiosis towards Verticillium dahliae, and parasitism and biocontrol of Sclerotium rolfsii. A non-Mendelian quantitative mode of inheritance was found for β-1, 3-glucanase and chitinase activities but only the latter exhibited a normal frequency distribution. Some of the progenies exhibited higher glucanase and chitinase activities than those found in the parental strains. Progeny analysis for chitinase, glucanase, cellulase, and glucose oxidase activities revealed no genetic association between any two of these enzymes. Antibiosis was correlated with glucose-oxidase activity in one cross, but not in the other. The ability to reduce bean root rot caused by S. rolfsii was correlated with mycoparasitic activity against S. rolfsii sclerotia in one cross, but not in the other. One out of the 20 progenies tested was able to reduce bean root rot more effectively than its parent strains, thus demonstrating the feasibility of improving a biocontrol agent by conventional breeding.
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