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Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology Aug 2023Fusarium head blight caused by Fusarium asiaticum is an important cereal crop disease, and the trichothecene mycotoxins produced by F. asiaticum can contaminate wheat...
Fusarium head blight caused by Fusarium asiaticum is an important cereal crop disease, and the trichothecene mycotoxins produced by F. asiaticum can contaminate wheat grain, which is very harmful to humans and animals. To effectively control FHB in large areas, the application of fungicides is the major strategy; however, the application of different types of fungicides has varying influences on the accumulation of trichothecene mycotoxins in F. asiaticum. In this study, phenamacril inhibited trichothecene mycotoxin accumulation in F. asiaticum; however, carbendazim (N-1H-benzimidazol-2-yl-carbamic acid, methyl ester) induced trichothecene mycotoxin accumulation. Additionally, phenamacril led to a lower level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by inducing gene expression of the catalase and superoxide dismutase (SOD) pathways in F. asiaticum, whereas carbendazim stimulated ROS accumulation by inhibiting gene expression of the catalase and SOD pathways. Based on these results, we conclude that phenamacril and carbendazim regulate trichothecene mycotoxin synthesis by affecting ROS levels in F. asiaticum.
Topics: Humans; Catalase; Reactive Oxygen Species; Fungicides, Industrial; Trichothecenes; Mycotoxins; Fusarium; Plant Diseases
PubMed: 37532325
DOI: 10.1016/j.pestbp.2023.105506 -
Plant Disease Jun 2023Carbendazim resistance was detected using 4,701 species complex isolates collected from major wheat-producing regions in China from 2018 to 2020. A total of 348...
Carbendazim resistance was detected using 4,701 species complex isolates collected from major wheat-producing regions in China from 2018 to 2020. A total of 348 carbendazim-resistant isolates were identified. The majority of carbendazim-resistant isolates were detected in Jiangsu and Anhui Provinces. In total, 227 and 88 isolates were obtained from each of the Jiangsu and Anhui Provinces, with a high resistance frequency of 41.12 and 20.56%, respectively. The predominant resistant isolates harboring point mutations were F167Y (79.31%), followed by E198Q (16.38%) and F200Y (4.31%). Compared with , isolates were more likely to produce carbendazim resistance. In this study, we first detected carbendazim-resistant isolates in Hebei, Shaanxi, Sichuan, and Hunan Provinces. In Jiangsu, Anhui, and Zhejiang, the frequency of carbendazim-resistant isolates maintained a high level, resulting in stable carbendazim-resistant populations. We also found the dynamic of carbendazim-resistance frequency in most provinces showed similar trends to the epidemic of Fusarium Head Blight (FHB). Our results facilitate the understanding of the current situation of carbendazim resistance of FHB pathogens and will be helpful for fungicides selection in different wheat-producing areas in China.
Topics: Benzimidazoles; Carbamates; Fusarium; Point Mutation; Triticum; Fungicides, Industrial
PubMed: 36471466
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-08-22-1998-SR -
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety Jul 2022Gut microbiota and nutrition play major roles in honey bee health. Recent reports have shown that pesticides can disrupt the gut microbiota and cause malnutrition in...
Gut microbiota and nutrition play major roles in honey bee health. Recent reports have shown that pesticides can disrupt the gut microbiota and cause malnutrition in honey bees. Carbendazim is the most commonly used fungicide in China, but it is not clear whether carbendazim negatively affects the gut microbes and nutrient intake levels in honey bees. To address this research gap, we assessed the effects of carbendazim on the survival, pollen consumption, and sequenced 16 S rRNA gene to determine the bacterial composition in the midgut and hindgut. Our results suggest that carbendazim exposure does not cause acute death in honey bees even at high concentrations (5000 mg/L), which are extremely unlikely to exist under field conditions. Carbendazim does not disturb the microbiome composition in the gut of young worker bees during gut microbial colonization and adult worker bees with established gut communities in the mid and hindgut. However, carbendazim exposure significantly decreases pollen consumption in honey bees. Thus, exposure of bees to carbendazim can perturb their beneficial nutrition homeostasis, potentially reducing honey bee immunity and increasing their susceptibility to infection by pathogens, which influence effectiveness as pollinators, even colony health.
Topics: Animals; Bees; Benzimidazoles; Carbamates; Gastrointestinal Microbiome; Pollen
PubMed: 35605324
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2022.113648 -
International Journal of Environmental... Aug 2022Soybean plants are highly susceptible to species, which significantly reduce soybean production and quality. Several species have been reported to synthesize...
Soybean plants are highly susceptible to species, which significantly reduce soybean production and quality. Several species have been reported to synthesize mycotoxins, such as trichothecene, which have been related to major human diseases. In November 2021, soybean pods in Nantong municipality, China, showed black necrotic lesions during the harvest stage. The disease incidence reached 69%. The pathogen was identified as via morphological analysis and sequencing of , and genes. A PCR assay with primers targeting the trichothecene biosynthesis genes suggested that the three isolates could synthesize trichothecenes. The effectiveness of fungicide carbendazim and natural metabolites dipicolinic acid and kojic acid was screened for the management of on postharvest soybean pods. The highest efficacy was obtained when combining 3.8 mg/mL carbendazim and 0.84 mg/mL dipicolinic acid (curative efficacy: 49.1% lesion length inhibition; preventive efficacy: 82.7% lesion length inhibition), or 1.9 mg/mL carbendazim and 0.71 mg/mL kojic acid (preventive efficacy: 84.9% lesion length inhibition). Collectively, this report will lead to a better understanding of the safety hazards found in soybean products in China and reveals the application of dipicolinic and kojic acids to reduce the use of carbendazim.
Topics: Benzimidazoles; Carbamates; Fusarium; Humans; Picolinic Acids; Pyrones; Glycine max; Triticum
PubMed: 36078255
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191710531 -
Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology Jan 2017Propamidine is an aromatic diamidine compound. In the current study, baseline sensitivity of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum to propamidine was determined using 78 strains...
Propamidine is an aromatic diamidine compound. In the current study, baseline sensitivity of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum to propamidine was determined using 78 strains collected from the oilseed rape fields without a previous history of propamidine usage. The median effective concentration (EC) values for propamidine inhibiting mycelial growth ranged from 0.406 to 3.647μg/mL, with a mean of 1.616±0.217μg/mL. There was no correlation between sensitivity to propamidine and sensitivity to dimethachlon or carbendazim. After treated with propamidine, mycelia were thinner with irregular distortion and more branches; cell wall became thicker with uneven distribution of cytoplasm than untreated control. In addition, sclerotia production, cell membrane permeability and oxalic acid content significantly decreased. On detached oilseed rape leaves, propamidine exhibited better control efficacy than carbendazim at the same concentration whether the leaves were inoculated with carbendazim-sensitive or resistant strains. All the results showed that propamidine exhibited strong antifungal activity and potential application in controlling S. sclerotiorum. Importantly, these data will provide more information on understanding the mode of action of propamidine against S. sclerotiorum and should be valuable for development of new antifungal drugs.
Topics: Ascomycota; Benzamidines; Benzimidazoles; Brassica rapa; Carbamates; Cell Membrane Permeability; Chlorobenzenes; Drug Resistance; Fungicides, Industrial; Microscopy, Electron, Scanning; Microscopy, Electron, Transmission; Mycelium; Oxalic Acid; Plant Diseases; Plant Leaves; Succinimides
PubMed: 28043336
DOI: 10.1016/j.pestbp.2016.05.006 -
Chemosphere Sep 2022Incorporating new pollutants and environmental pollution has become a formidable issue as new pollutants are introduced into it and have become a significant concern in...
Incorporating new pollutants and environmental pollution has become a formidable issue as new pollutants are introduced into it and have become a significant concern in recent years. Detection of such pollutants needs a susceptible, selective, and cost-effective sensor that can sense their presence and quantify them at a trace level. In the present study, we have designed a 2D graphene oxide (GO)-based glassy carbon electrode (GCE) electrochemical sensor (GO/GCE) and utilized it as a sensing material for the detection and determination of CRZ. The voltammetric behavior of CRZ was studied using cyclic voltammetry (CV) and square wave voltammetry (SWV) techniques. The SWV was applied to quantify and analyze CRZ in actual samples. A better response of CRZ was noticed at GO/GCE when phosphate buffer solution of pH 4.2 was used as a supporting electrolyte for to experiment. The SWV technique achieved trace-level detection of CRZ. A linearity plot was obtained for the concentration range of 1.0 × 10 M to 2.5 × 10 M with a limit of detection of 1.38 × 10 M. The selectivity of the modified sensor was verified by the interference study of metal ions and other pesticides with CRZ. The agricultural and environmental significance of the developed method was successfully tested by estimating CRZ in water and soil samples.
Topics: Benzimidazoles; Carbamates; Carbon; Electrochemical Techniques; Electrodes; Environmental Pollutants; Fungicides, Industrial; Graphite; Limit of Detection
PubMed: 35568220
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.134919 -
Parasitology Research Jan 2022Pebrine disease is caused by microporidia (Nosema bombycis) and is destructive to sericulture production. A carbendazim-based drug FangWeiLing (FWL) has a significant...
Pebrine disease is caused by microporidia (Nosema bombycis) and is destructive to sericulture production. A carbendazim-based drug FangWeiLing (FWL) has a significant control effect on the disease, which is a successful example of drug treatment of microsporidia. In this study, the therapeutic effect and critical action time of FWL were investigated by silkworm rearing biological test. Besides, the hemolymph samples from silkworms in the control group, model group, and FWL group were analyzed by metabonomics based on gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC/MS). The results showed that FWL had a significant therapeutic effect on pebrine disease, and the critical action time was 24 ~ 48 h post inoculation. Forty-seven different metabolites related to pebrine disease were screened out, and correlated with starch and sucrose metabolism; aminoacyl-tRNA biosynthesis; arginine biosynthesis; glycine, serine, and threonine metabolism; and phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan biosynthesis. After pretreatment with FWL, the metabolites were all effectively regulated, indicating productive intervention. Principal component analysis (PCA) also showed that the overall metabolic profile of the FWL group tended toward the control group. Compared with the control group, 16 different metabolites were obtained from the hemolymph of B.mori in FWL group, mainly involving aminoacyl-tRNA biosynthesis and taurine and hypotaurine metabolism. It indicated that FWL had some effect on silkworm metabolism, which might be related to the decrease in cocoon quality. In conclusion, combined with the life cycle of N. bombycis, the mechanism of carbendazim in the treatment of pebrine disease can be fully revealed. Carbendazim can effectively reduce the destruction of amino acid metabolism and carbohydrate metabolism by N. Bombycis infection by inhibiting the proliferation of the meronts in silkworms, thus maintaining the normal physiological state of B. mori and achieve therapeutic effects. GC/MS-based metabonomics is a valuable and promising strategy to understand the disease mechanism and drug treatment of pebrine disease.
Topics: Animals; Benzimidazoles; Bombyx; Carbamates; Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry; Metabolomics; Microsporidiosis; Nosema
PubMed: 34993633
DOI: 10.1007/s00436-021-07394-3 -
Plant Disease Jan 2022causes white rot, which is among the most devastating diseases affecting apple crops globally. In this study, we assessed resistance to carbendazim by collecting...
causes white rot, which is among the most devastating diseases affecting apple crops globally. In this study, we assessed resistance to carbendazim by collecting samples from warts on the infected branches of apple trees or from fruits exhibiting evidence of white rot. All samples were collected from different orchards in nine provinces of China in 2018 and 2019. In total, 440 isolates were evaluated, of which 19 isolates from three provinces were found to exhibit carbendazim resistance. We additionally explored the fitness and resistance stability of these isolates, revealing that they were no less fit than carbendazim-sensitive isolates in terms of pathogenicity, sporulation, and mycelial growth and that the observed carbendazim resistance was stable. Sequencing of the β- gene in carbendazim-resistant isolates showed the presence of a substitution at codon 198 (GAG to GCG) that results in an alanine substitution in place of glutamic acid (E198A) in all 19 resistant isolates. A loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) method was then developed to rapidly and specifically identify this E198A mutation. This LAMP method offers value as a tool for rapidly detecting carbendazim-resistant isolates bearing this E198A mutation and can thus be used for the widespread monitoring of apple crops to detect and control the development of such resistance.
Topics: Ascomycota; Benzimidazoles; Carbamates; Malus
PubMed: 34227835
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-06-20-1204-RE -
Environmental Pollution (Barking, Essex... Jan 2022Carbendazim (CBZ), a broad-spectrum pesticide frequently detected in fruits and vegetables, could trigger potential toxic risks to mammals. To facilitate the assessment...
Carbendazim (CBZ), a broad-spectrum pesticide frequently detected in fruits and vegetables, could trigger potential toxic risks to mammals. To facilitate the assessment of health risks, this study aimed to characterize the cytochrome P450 (CYPs)-mediated metabolism profiles of CBZ by a combined experimental and computational study. Our results demonstrated that CYPs-mediated region-selective hydroxylation was a major metabolism pathway for CBZ in liver microsomes from various species including rat, mouse, minipig, dog, rabbit, guinea pig, monkey, cow and human, and the metabolite was biosynthesized and well-characterized as 6-OH-CBZ. CYP1A displayed a predominant role in the region-selective hydroxylation of CBZ that could attenuate its toxicity through converting it into a less toxic metabolite. Meanwhile, five other common pesticides including chlorpyrifos-methyl, prochloraz, chlorfenapyr, chlorpyrifos, and chlorothalonil could significantly inhibit the region-selective hydroxylation of CBZ, and consequently remarkably increased CBZ exposure in vivo. Furthermore, computational study clarified the important contribution of the key amino acid residues Ser122, and Asp313 in CYP1A1, as well as Asp320 in CYP1A2 to the hydroxylation of CBZ through hydrogen bonds. These results would provide some useful information for the metabolic profiles of CBZ by mammalian CYPs, and shed new insights into CYP1A-mediated metabolic detoxification of CBZ and its health risk assessment.
Topics: Animals; Benzimidazoles; Carbamates; Cytochrome P-450 CYP1A2; Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System; Hydroxylation; Microsomes, Liver; Species Specificity
PubMed: 34793912
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.118523 -
Food Chemistry Oct 2022We reported a simple and scalable strategy for the preparation of mung bean-derived porous carbon@chitosan (MBC@CTS) composite, which was used to optimize the glassy...
We reported a simple and scalable strategy for the preparation of mung bean-derived porous carbon@chitosan (MBC@CTS) composite, which was used to optimize the glassy carbon electrode (GCE). The MBC@CTS/GCE sensor was applied for the carbendazim (CBZ) detection. For the MBC@CTS composite, MBC with three-dimensional hierarchical structure presented large specific surface area, good adsorbability, and high electrical conductivity, while CTS had good film-forming property, hydrophilicity performance, and adhesion capacity. The MBC@CTS/GCE sensor exhibited wonderful electrochemical detection performance towards CBZ. Under the optimized conditions, the MBC@CTS/GCE sensor showed a linear concentration range from 0.1 to 20 μM with relatively low limit of detection (LOD) of 20 nM. In addition, the fabricated sensor with good reproducibility, stability, and selectivity were successfully applied for the CBZ detection in apple and tomato juices with low relative standard deviation of 2.4 %-4.2% and satisfactory recoveries of 98.8-103.2%.
Topics: Benzimidazoles; Carbamates; Carbon; Chitosan; Electrochemical Techniques; Electrodes; Limit of Detection; Porosity; Reproducibility of Results; Vigna
PubMed: 35636194
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2022.133301