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1.
N Z Vet J ; 60(6): 315-28, 2012 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22913513

RESUMO

Ryegrass staggers is a seasonal mycotoxicosis of grazing livestock characterised by tremors, in coordination and a staggering gait almost unaccompanied by physical lesions. Deaths occur only as a consequence of accident or starvation. Outbreaks, in summer and autumn, occur only on pasture in which endophyte (Neotyphodium lolii)-infected perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) predominates and usually on which animals are grazed intensively. Animals recover when moved to a different type of grazing or after rain has promoted pasture growth. The disease was recognised for 80 years before its cause was discovered as a consequence of a grazing trial of sheep on three ryegrass cultivars which happened to have three different levels of endophyte infection. The endophyte was first formally described as Acremonium loliae, later corrected to Acremonium lolii, and was finally placed in the genus Neotyphodium. It produces a number of secondary metabolites of which lolitrem B is the principal one causing ryegrass staggers symptoms. Ergopeptides are also produced which cause heat stress and lack of productivity. N. lolii is symptomless in the plant, seed borne and grows intercellularly in the aerial parts, mainly in reproductive tillers and leaf sheaths but sparsely in leaf blades. It dies in stored seed and infection rates of different ryegrass cultivars have depended on seed storage times during their production. In addition, N. Lolii produces insect feeding deterrents, among them peramine, which protects infected plants from pest predation. Because of this, control of ryegrass staggers by elimination of endophyte-infected ryegrass is not feasible in areas in which insect predation is a serious pasture problem. However, N. lolii strains vary in the secondary metabolites they produce allowing the selection of strains that produce desirable metabolites. By inoculating such strains into uninfected ryegrass plants it is possible to produce cultivars which do not cause ryegrass staggers but resist insect predation. This review aims to provide a comprehensive summary of the current understanding of the N. lolii / L. perenne symbiosis, the toxins it is known to produce, their effects on animals and plants and the strategies used to control their ill effects while maximising their beneficial ones.


Assuntos
Lolium/microbiologia , Neotyphodium/fisiologia , Intoxicação por Plantas/veterinária , Simbiose , Animais
2.
N Z Vet J ; 56(3): 145-8, 2008 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18536774

RESUMO

CASE HISTORY: A 1-year-old, intact male Labrador-cross dog vomited after eating walnuts that had been on the ground for 5 months. The dog then developed tremors, ataxia, increased salivation, and hyperaesthesia. CLINICAL FINDINGS: The dog had marked generalised tremors, ataxia and a temperature of 39.9 degrees C. Both pupils were of normal size and normally responsive to light. Vomiting was induced, and walnut shell was visible in the vomitus. DIAGNOSIS: Due to the sudden onset of tremors, lack of exposure to other convulsive toxins, and the evidence of ingestion of walnuts, the provisional diagnosis was tremorgenic mycotoxicosis. The dog was treated symptomatically, and made a full recovery over 18 hours. Tremorgenic mycotoxins were detected within walnuts collected from the dog's environment. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Fungi that produce tremorgenic mycotoxins are present in New Zealand. Intoxication should be suspected in dogs that suddenly develop muscle tremors, especially if there is a history of ingestion of mouldy food 2-3 hours prior to the development of tremors.


Assuntos
Doenças do Cão/diagnóstico , Micotoxicose/veterinária , Micotoxinas/intoxicação , Animais , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Doenças do Cão/patologia , Cães , Microbiologia de Alimentos , Masculino , Micotoxicose/complicações , Micotoxicose/diagnóstico , Nova Zelândia , Nozes/microbiologia , Tremor/etiologia , Tremor/veterinária
3.
N Z Vet J ; 55(4): 188-90, 2007 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17676084

RESUMO

AIM: To identify fungi isolated from infections of the bovine mammary gland, and establish their possible sources. METHODS: From a herd of 420 cows, milk samples were collected from all quarters at calving and cultured to detect causative organisms. Quarters identified as infected with fungi were further sampled during early lactation. Samples from feedstuffs, the feed pad and ends of teats were also collected and analysed for the presence of fungi. RESULTS: Eleven of 420 cows were diagnosed with intramammary infections (IMI) caused by yeasts (nine cows, 10 quarters) and moulds (two cows, three quarters). Six of the yeast species had previously been reported as being responsible for mastitis. Elevated somatic cell counts (SCC) were observed in many quarters, but most infections were eliminated spontaneously. Two of the fungi isolated from milk samples were also isolated from feedstuffs and teat swabs, and seven other fungi isolated from milk samples were not isolated from feed, the feed pad or cows' teats. CONCLUSIONS: Isolation of fungi from the udder is rarely reported in dairy cows in New Zealand. In this herd, contamination of the end of the teat originating from feedstuffs and possibly exacerbated by the use of a feed pad may have led to the establishment of IMI caused by fungi. CLINICAL RELEVENCE: Fungi are infrequently if ever reported in mastitis trial data or surveys in New Zealand and are probably of little clinical significance.


Assuntos
Contaminação de Alimentos/análise , Fungos/isolamento & purificação , Glândulas Mamárias Animais/microbiologia , Leveduras/isolamento & purificação , Ração Animal , Animais , Bovinos , Contagem de Colônia Microbiana/veterinária , Feminino , Fungos/patogenicidade , Mastite Bovina/epidemiologia , Mastite Bovina/microbiologia , Nova Zelândia/epidemiologia , Leveduras/patogenicidade
4.
Vet Res Commun ; 28(3): 225-34, 2004 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15074768

RESUMO

Thirty-nine leaf samples of Narthecium ossifragum collected from eight sites in Møre og Romsdal County, Norway, during June-September 1997 and 41 leaf samples collected at five sites in the same county during June-August 1998 were analysed for the concentrations of steroidal sapogenins using GC-MS. The 1998 samples were also examined for fungal elements (conidia and hyphae) after incubation in a moist chamber for 10-14 days. The highest 1997 and 1998 leaf sapogenin concentrations (4881 and 7115 mg/kg dry matter, respectively) were 13-14 times greater than the lowest sapogenin concentrations found (344 and 531 mg/kg dry matter, respectively). The results did not reveal systematic differences in sapogenin concentrations between the two seasons, or between samples harvested early or late in the same seasons, or between sapogenin concentrations in plants harvested at different sites. Cladosporium magnusianum was the predominant fungus found in the samples. The degree of fungal infection on the samples was in generally low, but the number of C. magnusianum colonies in the moist chamber preparations and fungal elements (conidia and hyphae) in leaf washings and on leaves tended to increase with time. Factor analysis and multiple regression analysis performed on the chemical and fungal results suggest that sporulation may have occurred in the fungi in response to increase in sapogenin concentrations.


Assuntos
Cladosporium/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Liliaceae/metabolismo , Liliaceae/microbiologia , Doenças das Plantas/microbiologia , Plantas Tóxicas/microbiologia , Sapogeninas/metabolismo , Análise Fatorial , Noruega , Folhas de Planta/microbiologia , Análise de Regressão , Estações do Ano
5.
J Agric Food Chem ; 49(1): 522-6, 2001 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11170621

RESUMO

Bioassays were used to determine the production of the trichothecene mycotoxin, deoxynivalenol (DON), by two isolates of Fusarium graminearum when grown in association with potentially competitive fungi and an antifungal chemical, 6-pentyl-alpha-pyrone (6PAP). The presence of 6PAP in the culture medium reduced DON production by as much as 80%, but this effect was reduced for the F. graminearum isolate that most efficiently metabolized the added 6PAP. A 6PAP-producing Trichoderma isolate grown in a competition assay system with the F. graminearum isolates was also able to substantially reduce DON production. When Fusarium isolates (F. crookwellense, F. culmorum, F. subglutinans, F. poae, F. equiseti, F. avenaceum, and F. sambucinum), which co-occur with F. graminearum in New Zealand maize plants (Zea mays), were grown in competition assays, the effect on DON production was variable. However, all isolates of F. subglutinans tested were shown to cause reductions in DON production (by 13-76%, mean = 62%). F. subglutinans frequently co-occurs with F. graminearum, but its presence can vary with location and time of the season. When the competitive fungus tested was also a trichothecene producer (e.g., of nivalenol), both toxins were produced in the assay medium. The results indicate that mycotoxin production by F. graminearum can be affected by the presence of particular competitive fungi. These results have implications for an ecological understanding of pathogenicity and of mycotoxin accumulation in plants. Early establishment of F. subglutinans, for example, may act as a biological control mechanism providing a temporary protection against invasion by more commonly toxigenic fusaria such as F. graminearum.


Assuntos
Fusarium/genética , Fusarium/metabolismo , Tricotecenos/biossíntese , Fungicidas Industriais/farmacologia , Fusarium/efeitos dos fármacos , Micotoxinas/biossíntese , Pironas/farmacologia , Zea mays/microbiologia
6.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 64(2): 601-6, 1998 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9464398

RESUMO

Grazing of Echinopogon spp. by livestock in Australia has caused symptoms similar to those of perennial ryegrass staggers. We observed an endophytic fungus in the intercellular spaces of the leaves and seeds of New Zealand and Australian specimens of Echinopogon ovatus. Culture of surface-sterilized seeds from New Zealand specimens yielded a slow-growing fungus. An examination in which immunoblotting and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) were used indicated that E. ovatus plants from Australia and New Zealand were infected with fungi serologically related to Neotyphodium lolii (the endophyte of perennial ryegrass) and other Epichloe and Neotyphodium spp. endophytic in pooid grasses. No lolitrems (the indole-diterpenoids implicated as the causative agents of perennial ryegrass staggers), peramine analogs, or ergot alkaloids were detected in the infected specimens by high-performance liquid chromatography or ELISA. However, in endophyte-infected E. ovatus plants from New Zealand, analogs of the indole-diterpenoid paxilline (thought to be a biosynthetic precursor of the lolitrems and related tremorgens) were detected by ELISA, and N-formylloline was detected by gas chromatography. Endophyte-free specimens of New Zealand E. ovatus did not contain detectable paxilline analogs or lolines and were more palatable than infected specimens to adults of the pasture pest Listronotus bonariensis (Argentine stem weevil). Hyphae similar to those of the E. ovatus endophyte were also found in herbarium specimens of Echinopogon nutans var. major, Echinopogon intermedius, Echinopogon caespitosus, and Echinopogon cheeli. This appears to be the first time that an endophytic Neotyphodium species has been identified in grasses endemic to New Zealand or Australia.


Assuntos
Acremonium/isolamento & purificação , Poaceae/microbiologia , Acremonium/metabolismo , Acremonium/patogenicidade , Animais , Austrália , Bovinos , Nova Zelândia
7.
Mycopathologia ; 139(3): 165-73, 1997.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16283456

RESUMO

A time course study was made of the development of Fusarium infection and the appearance of the three Fusarium toxins, nivalenol (NV), deoxynivalenol (DON) and zearalenone (ZEN), in various fractions of maize plants from two sites in New Zealand, one in the Manawatu region and one in the Waikato. Fusarium infection was seen in leaf axil fractions in January, at the time of tassel emergence, and was detectable in stalks, leaf blades, rachis and peduncles during February and in kernels in April. NV, DON and ZEN were only detectable some time after infection was demonstrable. NV, in high concentrations relative to DON (up to 287 mg/kg for NV and up to 8 mg/kg for DON), was found in fractions from the Manawatu site where F. crookwellense and F. culmorum were the predominant toxigenic species. NV and DON at similar levels (up to 25 mg/kg) were found in fractions from the Waikato site at which F. graminearum and F. subglutinans predominated. Highest levels of NV and DON were in rachis and peduncle. ZEN was found most consistently in leaf axils and blades at both sites (up to 8 mg/kg at the Manawatu site and up to 75 mg/kg at the Waikato site) but at times there were high levels in rachis fractions (up to 417 mg/kg at the Manawatu site).

8.
Mycopathologia ; 135(3): 187-90, 1996.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9066158

RESUMO

An isolate of Laetisaria fuciformis in axenic culture did not produce toxic metabolites in concentrations sufficient to affect rats or sheep or mammalian cells in tissue culture, nor did it produce ergot alkaloids, paxilline or zearalenone in amounts detectable by ELISA. It did produce diffusable compound(s) inhibitory to a range of Gram-positive and -negative bacteria but not to the mould species tested.


Assuntos
Ração Animal/microbiologia , Basidiomycota/química , Micotoxinas/análise , Poaceae/microbiologia , Animais , Antibiose , Células Cultivadas , Indóis/análise , Masculino , Ratos , Ovinos , Testes de Toxicidade , Zearalenona/análise
10.
Vet Res Commun ; 16(2): 117-24, 1992.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1496813

RESUMO

Spores of Pithomyces chartarum (Berk. & Curt.) M.B. Ellis were only rarely seen on leaves of Narthecium ossifragum (L.) Hudson collected in summer from five areas in western Norway in which alveld, a photosensitization disease of lambs, is endemic. Cladosporium magnusianum (Jaap) M.B. Ellis was found on all 118 leaf samples collected in the summers of 1990 and 1991. The hypothesis that P. chartarum contributes to the aetiology of alveld could not be supported, but it is possible that C. magnusianum may have a role in the causation of the disease.


Assuntos
Cladosporium/isolamento & purificação , Fungos Mitospóricos/isolamento & purificação , Intoxicação por Plantas/veterinária , Plantas/microbiologia , Doenças dos Ovinos/microbiologia , Animais , Hepatopatias/microbiologia , Hepatopatias/veterinária , Noruega , Transtornos de Fotossensibilidade/microbiologia , Transtornos de Fotossensibilidade/veterinária , Intoxicação por Plantas/microbiologia , Ovinos
11.
Mycopathologia ; 116(2): 81-5, 1991 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1838139

RESUMO

After 6 weeks incubation on rice 2 strains of Fusarium crookwellense produced more zearalenone (6060-5010 mg/kg dry wt of culture) at ambient temperature (16-29 degrees C) in daylight than at ambient temperature (18-23 degrees C) in darkness or at controlled temperatures of 11 degrees C, 20 degrees C or 25 degrees C in darkness. Yields at 25 degrees C were low. Incubation at 11 degrees C during the second 3 weeks incubation increased yields only when preliminary incubation had been at 25 degrees C. After 6 weeks incubation at controlled temperatures in darkness, 4 strains produced most zearalenone at 20 degrees C (2460-21 360 mg/kg), 1 strain at 11 degrees C (6570 mg/kg). Yields at a temperature oscillating daily from 10-20 degrees C were less than at 15 degrees C. One of the 5 strains produced appreciable amounts of a-zearlaenol (1645 mg/kg at 20 degrees C) and 2 of nivalenol (340 and 499 mg/kg at 20 degrees C).


Assuntos
Fusarium/metabolismo , Zearalenona/biossíntese , Luz , Micotoxinas/biossíntese , Temperatura , Tricotecenos/biossíntese , Zeranol/análogos & derivados , Zeranol/metabolismo
12.
J Reprod Fertil ; 89(1): 99-106, 1990 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2142735

RESUMO

The reproductive performance of Coopworth ewes after administration of zearalenone was determined in two trials. In Trial I, zearalenone was administered to groups of 33 ewes at rates of 0, 1.5, 3.0, 6.0, 12.0 and 24.0 mg/ewe/day for 10 days, starting on Day 7 of the oestrous cycle before mating. There was a linear decline (P less than 0.001) in ovulation rate with dose of zearalenone; also cycle length decreased and duration of oestrous increased with increasing dose levels. Reductions in the incidence of ovulation and in fertilization were seen only at doses of 12 and 24 mg. In Trial 2, groups of 50 ewes were given the same range of doses of zearalenone for 10 days, starting 5 days after mating to entire rams. There was no effect of zearalenone treatment after mating on pregnancy rate or embryonic loss. These results indicate that the effects of zearalenone, administered orally, on ewe reproduction, at the dose levels examined, were restricted to ewes exposed before mating. Intakes of zearalenone of 3 mg/ewe/day or more during this period would be reflected as depressed ovulation rates and lower lambing percentages.


Assuntos
Reprodução/efeitos dos fármacos , Resorcinóis/administração & dosagem , Ovinos/fisiologia , Zearalenona/administração & dosagem , Administração Oral , Animais , Copulação , Relação Dose-Resposta a Droga , Estro/efeitos dos fármacos , Feminino , Fertilização/efeitos dos fármacos , Fusarium , Ovulação/efeitos dos fármacos , Zearalenona/farmacologia
13.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 51(4): 821-4, 1986 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3707124

RESUMO

Four strains each of seven tremorgenic Penicillium species were grown under various conditions and tested for tremorgen production by intraperitoneal injection of mice and by chemical analysis. Half of the strains had previously been found to be tremorgenic on bioassay after growth on Czapek Dox yeast extract broth or potato-milk-sucrose broth for 3 weeks at 26 degrees C. In the tests reported here nearly all previously nontremorgenic strains were either tremorgenic to mice or produced tremorgens detectable by chemical analysis but did so after longer incubation periods than used in the original screening. Bioassay was not suitable for the estimation of absolute levels but was preferable to chemical analysis when the identity of the tremorgens was not known. Species and strains within species gave different responses to changes in culture medium, incubation temperature, light irradiation, and shaking. Overall, tremorgen production was maximal at 20 or 26 degrees C, increased with time, and was reduced in shaken culture.


Assuntos
Indóis/biossíntese , Micotoxinas/biossíntese , Penicillium/metabolismo , Animais , Bioensaio , Meios de Cultura , Camundongos , Penicillium/efeitos da radiação , Temperatura , Raios Ultravioleta
14.
N Z Vet J ; 33(11): 193, 1985 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16031117
15.
17.
Res Vet Sci ; 24(3): 347-51, 1978 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-674846

RESUMO

Tremorgenic strains of Penicillium verrucosum var cyclopium, P canescens, P janthinellum, P novaezeelandiae and P estinogenum were isolated from the faeces of 15 of 23 affected sheep and cattle in eight of nine field outbreaks of ryegrass staggers. One tremorgenic strain of P griseofulvum was isolated from the faeces of one of 25 sheep grazing in unaffected flocks. Tremorgenic strains of P verrucosum var cyclopium, P canescens, P janthinellum and P estinogenum were also isolated from the A horizon of New Zealand soils. Since a large proportion of experimentally dosed live P verrucosum var cyclopium died during passage through the gut, the faecal evidence from naturally staggering animals suggests that at least some outbreaks of ryegrass staggers are caused by tremorgenic Penicillia and that their source may be soil.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Bovinos/microbiologia , Penicillium/isolamento & purificação , Intoxicação por Plantas/veterinária , Doenças dos Ovinos/microbiologia , Animais , Bovinos , Fezes/microbiologia , Penicillium/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Poaceae , Ovinos , Microbiologia do Solo , Temperatura
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