Cereals, such
as wheat and barley which are ranking the most produced grains, are consumed as
major staple food. However, because of the inseparable contact with soil,
cereal crops are extremely prone to soil-borne toxigenic fungi infections such
as Fusarium spp. that causing yield loss and grain quality reduction. In
particular, F. graminearum, a causal agent of Fusarium head blight (FHB),
causes millions of lost on wheat production in Northern and Central America
every year. The current research studied the antifungal, mycotoxin inhibitory
activity of emulsions formed with thyme oil and its four major components
(thymol, p-cymene, γ-terpinene,
and linalool) on two chemotype of F.
graminearum isolates, and their corresponding mode of action (MOA). Among
five essential oil (EO) compounds, thymol presented the strongest antifungal
and mycotoxin inhibitory efficacy followed by thyme oil emulsion. The 50%
inhibition of spore germination (EC50) on two chemotype Fusarium
graminearum isolates can be achieved by thymol emulsion at the
concentration of 0.38 and 0.48 mg/ml, respectively. According to the SEM and
CLSM images, spore morphology changes and cell membrane destruction were the
main reasons attributed to the inhibition of spore germination. Significant (p
˂0.05)
mycotoxin reduction was also observed when five EOs in emulsion based delivery
systems were applied. Interestingly, linalool was shown to be a more effective
spore germination inhibitor rather than mycotoxin production inhibitor, while
p-cymene and γ-terpinene
behaved the opposite way. We further investigated the MOA of thyme and thymol
emulsions on suppression of mycotoxin production on genetic level. We observed
that thyme oil significantly (p ˂0.05)
up-regulated the expression of the genes studied (Tri3, Tri4, and
Tri5), while thymol did not up-regulate any gene expression. This study
established the potential application of thymol and thyme oil emulsion as a
safe and more effective preservative in food. Future research will focus on
discovering the potential synergistic effect of thymol with other compounds to
reduce the essential oil usage level.
This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative under Agreement No. 59-0206-0-130 and USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (FAR0032822). Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the view of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.