2024 article

Inactivation of siderophore iron-chelating moieties by the fungal wheat root symbiont <i>Pyrenophora biseptata</i>

French, K. S., Chukwuma, E., Linshitz, I., Namba, K., Duckworth, O. W., Cubeta, M. A., & Baars, O. (2024, January 19). ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY REPORTS.

By: K. French n, E. Chukwuma n, I. Linshitz*, K. Namba*, O. Duckworth n, M. Cubeta n, O. Baars n

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: January 29, 2024

AbstractWe investigated the ability of four plant and soil‐associated fungi to modify or degrade siderophore structures leading to reduced siderophore iron‐affinity in iron‐limited and iron‐replete cultures. Pyrenophora biseptata, a melanized fungus from wheat roots, was effective in inactivating siderophore iron‐chelating moieties. In the supernatant solution, the tris‐hydroxamate siderophore desferrioxamine B (DFOB) underwent a stepwise reduction of the three hydroxamate groups in DFOB to amides leading to a progressive loss in iron affinity. A mechanism is suggested based on the formation of transient ferrous iron followed by reduction of the siderophore hydroxamate groups during fungal high‐affinity reductive iron uptake. P. biseptata also produced its own tris‐hydroxamate siderophores (neocoprogen I and II, coprogen and dimerum acid) in iron‐limited media and we observed loss of hydroxamate chelating groups during incubation in a manner analogous to DFOB. A redox‐based reaction was also involved with the tris‐catecholate siderophore protochelin in which oxidation of the catechol groups to quinones was observed. The new siderophore inactivating activity of the wheat symbiont P. biseptata is potentially widespread among fungi with implications for the availability of iron to plants and the surrounding microbiome in siderophore‐rich environments.