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Mycotoxins continue to be a very serious threat to human health and
a major concern for those entrusted with
regulatingthesafetyoffoodandfoodproducts.Infectionofcerealsandothercrops,
notablegrapevine, byFusarium, Aspergillus andPenicillium are a
world-wide problem and recent epidemics in Europe, the USA and
Canada have focused attention on this problem. A previous Special
Issue of the European Journal of Plant Pathology (108 (7) 2003) was
concerned with the nature of these toxins and the fungi that can
produce them. The aim of this publication is to review the
environmental factors that in?uence the success of these fungi as
pathogens and as organisms affecting stored products, and to
discuss how these factors can also in?uence the amounts of toxin
that accumulate. These reviews were originally presented at a
Workshop of the EU COST Action 835 entitled 'Agriculturally
Important Toxigenic Fungi' (Chairperson Antonio Logrieco, Bari,
Italy), held in East Malling, UK at the Horticultural Research
International in September 2002. We hope the information provided
will stimulate scientists world-wide to assess the risk of toxins
accumulating in plants under a range of environmental conditions
and that this will provide an insight into how the accumulation of
these toxins can be kept to a minimum. XiangmingXu JohnBailey
MichaelCooke EuropeanJournalofPlantPathology109: 645-667, 2003. (c)
2003KluwerAcademicPublishers.
There is an urgent need to expand our knowledge of both the nature
of the toxigenic fungi that are widespread on
economically-important plants and the effect of their toxic
secondary metabolites on human health. Informa tion about the
production of mycotoxins by plant pathogens, particularly by
species of Fusarium, Aspergillus and Penicillium, their occurrence
in infected plants, as well as their role in the plant-pathogen
interaction, for example as virulence/pathogenicity factors, is a
pre-requisite for preventing plant disease and hence for reducing
the Ievels of mycotoxin contamination. Fusarium infections in
cereals and other crops are a particular problern world-wide and
recent epidemics on wheat in Europe, the USA and Canada have again
focused attention on this problem. Fur thermore, species
ofAspergillus and Penicillium and their related mycotoxins,
particularly Ochratoxin A, represent another consistent problern on
cereals and grapes, especially in Europe where 40% of the global
grape crop is grown. The aim of this publication is to gather
together specialist updated reviews based on papers originally
presented during a Workshop of EU Cost Action 835 entitled
'Agriculturally Important Taxigenie Fungi', held in Rome, 7-8
October 1999 at the Plant Pathology Research Institute. We hope the
diversity of the contents will stimulate discussion, encourage the
sharing of information and result in cross-fertilization of ideas
needed for the solution of the present problems. This special issue
will be of particular value to interdisciplinary scientists and
especially mycologists, mycotoxicologists, plant pathologists and
those concerned about the quality of food and food products.
This book is a collection of papers presented at a NATO Advanced
Research Workshop on "Biology and Molecular Biology of
Plant-Pathogen Interactions" which was held at Dillington College,
Ilminster, UK, 1-6 September 1985. It had been preceded by Advanced
Study Institutes at Porte Conte, Sardinia in 1975 and at Cape
Sounion, Greece in 1981. In recent years, methods for the
manipulation and transfer of genes have revolutionized our
understanding of gene structure and function. It was thus opportune
to bring together scientists from distinct disciplines, e. g. plant
pathology, cytology, biochemistry and molecular biology to discuss
our present understanding of cellular interactions between plants.
We also explored how the potential offered by the newer molecular
technologies could best be realized. It soon became evident at the
Workshop, and is a repeated theme of this publication, that future
research will need concentrated multi disciplinary programmes. Many
of the new approaches will be valuable. For example,
immunocytochemistry does, for the first time, allow molecules to be
located precisely within infected tissues. Equally, the methods of
DNA isolation and gene transformation will facilitate the isolation
and characterization of genes associated with pathogenesis and
specificity. The description at the Workshop of immunocytochemical
protocols and of transformation systems for pathogenic fungi have
already stimulated an upsurge in research on plant-pathogen
relationships. The papers discuss many interactions between plants
and fungal and bacterial pathogens, but also provide a comparison
with mycorrhizal and symbiotic relationships, and those involving
mycoparasites."
Mycotoxins continue to be a very serious threat to human health and
a major concern for those entrusted with
regulatingthesafetyoffoodandfoodproducts.Infectionofcerealsandothercrops,
notablegrapevine, byFusarium, Aspergillus andPenicillium are a
world-wide problem and recent epidemics in Europe, the USA and
Canada have focused attention on this problem. A previous Special
Issue of the European Journal of Plant Pathology (108 (7) 2003) was
concerned with the nature of these toxins and the fungi that can
produce them. The aim of this publication is to review the
environmental factors that in?uence the success of these fungi as
pathogens and as organisms affecting stored products, and to
discuss how these factors can also in?uence the amounts of toxin
that accumulate. These reviews were originally presented at a
Workshop of the EU COST Action 835 entitled 'Agriculturally
Important Toxigenic Fungi' (Chairperson Antonio Logrieco, Bari,
Italy), held in East Malling, UK at the Horticultural Research
International in September 2002. We hope the information provided
will stimulate scientists world-wide to assess the risk of toxins
accumulating in plants under a range of environmental conditions
and that this will provide an insight into how the accumulation of
these toxins can be kept to a minimum. XiangmingXu JohnBailey
MichaelCooke EuropeanJournalofPlantPathology109: 645-667, 2003. (c)
2003KluwerAcademicPublishers.
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