Subscriber access provided by Warwick University Library
Article
Metabolic Profiling on Alternaria Toxins and Components of Xinjiang Jujubes Incubated with Pathogenic Alternaria alternata and Alternaria tenuissima via Orbitrap High Resolution Mass Spectrometry Dongqiang Hu, Yingying Fan, Yanglan Tan, Ye Tian, Na Liu, Lan Wang, Duoyong Zhao, Cheng Wang, and Aibo Wu J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b03243 • Publication Date (Web): 07 Sep 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 10, 2017
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
1
Metabolic Profiling on Alternaria Toxins and Components of Xinjiang Jujubes
2
Incubated with Pathogenic Alternaria alternata and Alternaria tenuissima via
3
Orbitrap High Resolution Mass Spectrometry
4
Dongqiang Hu †, Yingying Fan ‡, Yanglan Tan †, Ye Tian †, Na Liu †, Lan Wang †,
5
Duoyong Zhao ‡, Cheng Wang *‡, Aibo Wu *†.
6
† SIBS-UGENT-SJTU Joint Laboratory of Mycotoxin Research, Key Laboratory of
7
Food Safety Research, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy
8
of Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, P.R.China,
9
‡ Institute of Quality Standards & Testing Technology for Agro-Products, Key
10
Laboratory of agro-products quality and safety of Xinjiang, Laboratory of Quality and
11
Safety Risk Assessment for Agro-Products (Urumqi), Ministry of Agriculture,
12
Xinjiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Urumqi 830091, Xinjiang Province,
13
P.R.China
14 15
Corresponding Author
16
*E-mail:
[email protected]. Phone: +86-021-54920716. Fax: +86-021-54920716
17
ORCID
18
Aibo Wu: 0000-0002-7161-1592
19
Cheng Wang:
20
Notes
21
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
22
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
23
Abstract:
24
Xinjiang jujubes (zizyphus rhamnaceae) are important agro-economically foods
25
with the highest planting area and yields in China, however, black spot disease and
26
contaminated Alternaria toxins have unfortunately caused decline or loss of jujubes
27
nutritional quality in recent years. In this study, we used ultra-high performance liquid
28
chromatography coupled to Orbitrap high-resolution mass spectrometry (UHPLC-
29
Orbitrap HRMS) to profile both Alternaria toxins and components in three
30
representative Xinjiang jujubes, Hami Huang (HM), Hetian Jun (HT) and Ruoqiang
31
Hui (RQ). Before LC-MS analysis, jujubes were inoculated with two main pathogens
32
of Alternaria alternata (Aa) and Alternaria tenuissima (At). Different combination of
33
jujube varieties with pathogenic isolates display different metabolic profiles as
34
expected. Moreover, four major Alternaria toxins, alternariol (AOH), alternariol
35
monomethyl ether (AME), altenuene (ALT) and tenuazonic acid (TeA) were detected
36
in all samples. The inoculation of both pathogens significantly decreased the levels of
37
nutrients and metabolites in jujube, including 4 saponins, 3 organic acids and 3
38
alkaloids, whereas it increased the level of several glycerol phosphates. The flavonoid
39
profiles are diverse. Lastly, inoculation of Aa changes more metabolites in jujubes
40
than At. Our data provides insights to better understand the detrimental contamination
41
of Alternaria pathogens in Xinjiang jujubes and improve food safety of jujubes.
42
Keyword:
43
zizyphus rhamnaceae; Alternaria toxins; nutritients and metabolites; Orbitrap
44
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 36
Page 3 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
45
Introduction
46
Jujube (zizyphus rhamnaceae) is a popular nutritional food fruit and a main
47
source of carbohydrates in both China and worldwide. The natural distribution of
48
jujubes is mainly in Central Asia, northern India and China. China is the largest
49
producer and consumer of jujubes in the world. Xinjiang province of China produces
50
30% of jujubes in China, more than 7 million tons per year, ranking No. 1 in China.
51
Jujube production is the pillar industry in Xinjiang. Unfortunately, fungal
52
contamination in jujube fruits can cause visible plant diseases, including black spot
53
diseases, corky core, rust disease and anthracnose, etc. Particularly in the recent
54
decade, black spot disease frequently occurred during rainy season in Xinjiang
55
province, which has an arid climate. The main cause of black spot disease is
56
Alternaria spp., which infect jujubes during their growth, processing and storage.
57
In general, Alternaria black spot disease has been found in many garden and
58
flowering plants. The lesions are found on branches, leaves(1), fruits(2), and the
59
roots(3). Although Alternaria spp. are regarded as asexual fungi, sexual reproduction
60
also exists (4) to generate new Alternaria strains. These new strains may produce new
61
types of metabolites and toxins, thus leading to more challenges to control Alternaria.
62
Alternaria toxins can be classified in two types, nonspecific toxins (NHSTs) and host-
63
selective toxins (HSTs) (5). NHSTs aggravate plant diseases, including TeA, AOH,
64
AME, ALT, and TEN, whereas HSTs bind to specific toxin receptors in specific
65
hosts, for example, Alternaria citri toxin (ACT) is found in infected citrus(6),
66
Alternaria fries toxin (AF) in strawberries(7), Alternaria kikuchiana toxin (AK) in
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
67
pears(8), Alternaria lycopersici toxin (AL) in tomatoes(9), and so on.
68
Xinjiang jujubes are not only edible drupes, also have great values for traditional
69
Chinese medicine, because they are rich in soluble sugars including fructose, glucose,
70
rhamnose, sorbitol and sucrose. Jujubes also contain abundant of other nutrients
71
including potassium, phosphorus, calcium, manganese(10), vitamin C, phenolics,
72
flavonoids, triterpenic acids, and polysaccharides (11). Previous studies used the 2,2-
73
diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl and ferric-reducing antioxidant power assays to reveal that
74
jujubes have antioxidant capacity(12). The results in mice showed that extracts of
75
jujube fruits significantly decreased the activities of alanine aminotransferase and
76
aspartate aminotransferase, and attenuated tissue damages that were caused by
77
oxidative stress(13). The studies on animals also discovered that flavonoids and
78
saponins in jujube extracts have both sedative and hypnotic functions (14), and jujube
79
juice can prolong the hexobarbital-induced sleeping time in mice(15). In Korea,
80
jujube fruit extracts from three different breeds were analyzed, the results showed that
81
these three breeds contain different bioactive contents, particularly, the flavonoids
82
varied widely (16). In China, jujube cultivars have different antioxidant capacity, and
83
alpha-tocopherol and β-carotenes contents were found relevant in some of the jujube
84
cultivars(17).
85
Recently, Orbitrap HRMS has been widely used since its accuracy and precision
86
are higher than that of other mass spectrometers. Researchers evaluated the glycation
87
level of bovine serum albumin by using Orbitrap mass spectrometry, creating a new
88
method to detect modified proteins(18). In another study, Orbitrap MS can detect
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 36
Page 5 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
89
significant increase levels of eleven exogenous metabolites in plasma of female rats,
90
which have been fed with cranberry procyanidins(19). Orbitrap was also used for the
91
environmental science to monitor the degradation of cytostatic etoposide, several
92
etoposide by-products were found(20). In forensic investigations, Orbitrap allows to
93
detect trace content of anabolic steroids and their esters in human hair, thus providing
94
supporting evidence to identify suspects (21). Taken together, Orbitrap is a powerful
95
analytical tool and widely used to perform comparison analysis, confirm new
96
substances, detect trace components, and so on.
97
Black spot disease not only causes yield loss to the pillar industry of Xinjiang,
98
but also huge nutrient loss and quality decline for those harvested products. The
99
normal color of jujube fruit is from cyan to dark red during growth phase, while
100
disease area of jujube fruit colored from light red to black, which mislead people to
101
ingest the infected fruit. The infected part of fruit feels hard, mildew, decaying and
102
tastes astringent, differing from the soft and sweet taste of natural mature jujube fruits.
103
Because of the saccharides and amino acids consumption by pathogens, there are no
104
major nutrients in infected jujube fruits for food supply, on the contrary, potential
105
Alternaria toxins can be dangerous to human.
106
Most studies used postharvest jujube fruits to find the solutions to extend jujube
107
storage time, however, it is largely unknown how various Alternaria isolates infect
108
different jujube varieties to the black spot disease. Here, we used two Alternaria
109
isolates, which infected Xinjiang jujube and caused black spot disease, to examine
110
their pathogenic effects on three jujube fruits from Xinjiang province. These three
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
111
jujube fruits include HM with ellipsoidal shape, HT with spheroidal shape, and RQ
112
with the smallest size and higher glycogen contents. In vitro inoculation studies were
113
carried out to examine the invasion of two pathogens in different Xinjiang jujubes.
114
LTQ-Obitrap high-resolution mass spectrometric was used to identify the profiles of
115
Alternaria toxins and metabolites in jujubes after inoculation.
116
Overall, the primary purpose of this study is to analyze the profiles of Alternaria
117
toxins and components of jujube fruits which were inoculated with Alternaria
118
pathogens. The results will provide new insights into metabolic changes before and
119
after the invasion of Alternaria spp. in jujubes.
120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 36
Page 7 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
133 134
Materials and Methods
135
Reagents and Medium
136
To make 1 liter of potato dextrose agar medium (PDA), 20 g glucose, 15 g agar
137
and 200 g boiled extracts of potatoes were mixed. 200 g jujube powders and 15 g agar
138
were mixed to make 1 liter of jujube medium. Jujube fruits were first washed using
139
distilled water, then washed using 75% ethanol and distilled water before
140
denucleation, lyophilization and milling to obtain jujube powder. The powders were
141
evenly spread out and sterilized using ultraviolet for 30 min. During sterilization, the
142
powder was re-mixed every 10 min. All the medium contains 50 mg ampicillin per
143
liter.
144
Magnesium sulphate (MgSO4) and sodium chloride (NaCl) were purchased from
145
Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd (Shanghai, China). Methanol, acetonitrile and
146
ammonium acetate were chromatographic grade and purchased from Tedia Co., Ltd
147
(Shanghai, China). Standards of TeA, AOH and TEN were purchased from Romar
148
Supply, Inc (Tulln, Austria).
149
Jujube Breeds and Pathogens
150
Jujubes were collected from several orchards of Xinjiang Production &
151
Construction Corp in the late autumn. The sampling location was at the Tarim river
152
coast in southern Xinjiang province, along the river coast, RQ jujubes were from
153
Ruoqiang county, HT jujubes were from Hetian county, HM jujubes were from Hami
154
county. The jujubes from every breed include both healthy and sick samples, the sick
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
155
samples were conformed to have the black spot disease. It can be clearly found lump
156
and decay inside the flesh of jujubes with black spot disease-positive when isolating
157
pathogens.
158
Two Alternaria genus, Aa and At, were isolated from the sick jujubes with
159
confirmed black spot disease. The infected parts of sick jujubes were torn out and
160
cultured in PDA medium. After three days, single fungal colony was picked and re-
161
inoculated in the PDA medium, DNA of single colony was extracted and sequenced
162
by ITS sequencing, the sequences were aligned and analyzed using BLAST. After
163
incubation and collection of fungal spores, two main pathogens of jujube black spot
164
disease were obtained.
165
Sample Preparation
166
Five microliter spores of each Alternaria isolate were inoculated in PDA, HM,
167
HT and RQ mediums respectively. Five microliter distilled water was added on each
168
medium as blank control. All conditions contain three replications. After 7 days of
169
incubation, all the mediums were lyophilized at -20 °C for overnight, then milled to
170
powders. Jujube powder from each sample was mixed to 80 % of methanol, MgSO4
171
and NaCl in proportion of 4:1. After vortexing for 5 min, the extract was sonicated for
172
20 min. The solution was centrifuged for 10 minutes and the supernatant was
173
collected.
174
Parameters of UHPLC-Orbitrap and LC-MS
175
UHPLC and HRMS were used to obtain the metabolic profile of pathogens in
176
jujubes. The Waters Acquity UPLC system was used. It includes an autosampler,
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 36
Page 9 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
177
binary pump, an ultraviolet detector and a thermostatted column compartment.
178
Chromatographic separation was performed on an Agilent Extend—C18 column (100
179
mm × 4.6 mm, 3.5 µm) at 30 °C. The mobile phase mixture consists of 5 mM
180
ammonium acetate and acetonitrile, which were mobile phase A and B respectively.
181
The gradient elution program was performed as followings: 0-2 min, 95% A; 2-
182
13min, 95%–0% A; 13–15 min, 0% A; 15–18 min, 0%–95% A and 18-20 min, 95%
183
A. The injection volume was 5 µL and the flow rate was 300 µL/min. The component
184
alteration was analyzed using Thermo Q Exactive Quadrupole Orbitrap HRMS. This
185
system has the scanning range of more than four quantitative series with femtogram
186
grad sensitivity. The instrument was operated in a negative mode, and the operation
187
parameters were as follows: capillary temperature, 320 °C; pray voltage, 3.00 KV;
188
auxiliary gas heater temperature, 300 °C; scan modes, full MS and MS/MS. The mass
189
range was from 70 to 1050 dalton, thus covering most metabolic macromolecules.
190
Thermo Finnigan TSQ VANTAGE triple quadrupole LC-MS was used to
191
confirm the newly identified mycotoxin from incubated samples. Medium extracts
192
and the standards of TeA, AOH and TEN, were mixed and injected to the
193
chromatographic column. The standards were used for intercomparison. The LC
194
parameters were as follows: mobile phase A was 5 mM ammonium acetate, mobile
195
phase B was acetonitrile, and gradient elution program was 0-5 min, 80%-20% A; 5-
196
7min, 20% A; 7–8 min, 20%-80% A and 8–10 min, 80% A. The MS scan mode was
197
SRM, and the ions for quantitative analysis included TeA: m/z 196.1 [M-H], AOH:
198
m/z 259.1 [M+H] and TEN: m/z 413.2 [M+H].
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
199
Data Analysis
200
The raw HRMS data were uploaded onto the website of XCMS online
201
(https://xcmsonline.scripps.edu). The primary manipulation was creating a single job,
202
uploading all the raw files, feature detection, correction and alignment of retention
203
time, statistical analysis and data visualization. At last, the mass spectra for each
204
sample were transformed to a two-dimensional matrix(22). Three jujube cultures and
205
PDA samples were chosen to create a multi-group job, and the cultures with two
206
pathogens were chosen to create a pairwise job. The results of XCMS were imported
207
to the statistical software, SIMCA-P 11.5, for principal component analysis (PCA).
208
METLLIN database was used for the analysis, each peak of chromatograms
209
represented a metabolic feature, which can be exactly identified with accurate
210
molecular weight. The seven-step protocol was used to characterize metabolites (23).
211
Amount changed metabolites and their fold changes were listed to generate a heatmap
212
to present metabolite profile.
213
To confirm the jujube plates contained the Alternaria toxins, multiple reaction
214
monitoring (MRM) was performed using the triple quadrupole LC-MS system. Once
215
its retention time matched the exact mass of quantitative ion, the substance was well-
216
determined.
217 218 219 220
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 10 of 36
Page 11 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
221
Results and Discussion
222
Total Extracted Ion Chromatogram (TIC) and General Description
223
In this study, the extracts of culture mediums were analyzed using UHPLC-
224
Orbitrap, and the metabolic profile of Aa and At were investigated. The representative
225
UHPLC-HRMS TIC of extracts from two incubated mediums and uncultured medium
226
were shown (Figure 1). From the TIC, as the process of gradient elution program, the
227
extracts from all samples have a chromatographic peak with high intensity at the 2nd
228
minute. As the ratio of acetonitrile amount increased, more peaks appeared in the
229
incubated samples than in the original jujubes, even though the intensities of some
230
peaks attenuated. The metabolite profiles of the Aa inoculated samples are largely
231
different from that of the At inoculated samples. Aa produced more metabolites than
232
At. On the other hand, At produced the metabolites that Aa did not. The components
233
of three jujube breeds also varied. HM and HT have the components that can’t be
234
detected in RQ, thus showing a closer relationship between HM and HT (Figure 1 in
235
the Supporting Information). However, chromatographic peak changes before and
236
after incubation were similar among three breeds for jujubes in both pathogens. In
237
summary, two pathogens can significantly change the metabolic profiles of three
238
jujube breeds.
239
Alternaria Toxins Produced in Xinjiang Jujubes Incubated with Alternaria
240
Isolates
241
The ion chromatogram for each Alternaria toxin was obtained in the ms2 mode of
242
the full scan chromatogram. The accurate mass of TeA, AOH, AME and ALT are
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
243
197.11, 258.05, 272.07 and 292.09, respectively, in the negative mode, the ionized
244
form of Alternaria toxin is [M-H]-, and the accurate mass of these ionized Alternaria
245
toxins are 196.10, 257.05, 271.06 and 291.09. From the scan filter, each mycotoxin
246
was detected, along with the peak time: TeA, 6.6min; AOH, 12.1min; AME 13.5min;
247
and ALT, 11.2min (Figure 2). The intensity of extracted ion chromatographic peak for
248
each Alternaria toxin in Aa is higher than At, suggesting more mycotoxins were
249
produced in Aa. Therefore, it is very likely that Aa grows faster than At in jujube
250
mediums. Furthermore, we used the standards of three Alternaria toxins to obtain the
251
MRM chromatograms of mycotoxins that two pathogens emerged, and two main
252
quantitative fragment ions of each toxin were detected in the same peak time (Figure
253
2 and 3 in the Supporting Information). The MRM results were consistent with the
254
extracted chromatogram of full scan mode, indicating that Aa produced more
255
Alternaria toxins than At.
256
Besides NHSTs of TeA, AOH, AME and ALT, HSTs were also searched in the
257
full scan chromatograms (Figure 4 in the Supporting Information). Only in the
258
samples that incubated with At, AK-V toxin appeared at 7.7 min, whereas AF-V toxin
259
emerged at 14.3 min in both At and Aa. Relative contents of these Alternaria toxins
260
were calculated (Figure 5 in the Supporting Information), and compared to general
261
medium, contents of each Alternaria toxin decreased in most jujube media for
262
Alternaria isolates, especially for At. The jujubes incubated with Aa produced more
263
AF_2 than those incubated with At. The HM jujubes incubated with At produced
264
more AK_2 and AF_2 than the HT jujubes incubated with At. Interestingly, neither of
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 36
Page 13 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
265
two HSTs was found in the RQ jujubes, the possible reason is that these two
266
Alternaria isolates may produce different HSTs rather than AK_2 and AF_2 in RQ
267
jujubes. In this study, no other HSTs were detected in the incubated jujube samples.
268
For a long time, Alternaria toxins had not not been much accounted in the field
269
of mycotoxins. Although FDA lists TeA as a poisonous substance, no food safety
270
agent made any standards in food supply for Alternaria toxins. Our study revealed
271
that mycotoxins are produced in the jujubes, which have Alternaria black spot
272
disease. The results clearly showed the same abundance of other NHSTs with that of
273
TeA. In addition to NHSTs, HSTs were also detected. We are the first to confirm that
274
the jujubes having Alternaria black spot disease produce both AK_2 and AF_2. All
275
these results suggested that the jujube black spot disease was the consequence of the
276
additive effect of HSTs and NHSTs. HSTs were pathogenic factors that determine the
277
parasitic range and host specificity, whereas NHSTs were virulence factors that
278
aggravate the jujube black spot disease.
279
PCA Analysis of Different Incubated Samples
280
The profile of metabolites and components changes before and after Alternaria
281
incubation were demonstrated by PCA analysis, clustering experimental samples
282
based on metabolite profile. After PCA analysis, the multicomponent data of each
283
medium sample was transformed into a two-dimensional matrix with two principal
284
variables that avoid ion information loss. This analysis has better interpretation of the
285
MS data. For the pathogen Aa in three jujube mediums, after incubation, significantly
286
changes appeared and all the incubated samples were clustered together (Figure 3B).
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
287
However, in jujube mediums incubated with At, two group-specific clusters
288
overlapped, with a clear approach between HT jujube samples incubated with At and
289
RQ jujube samples (Figure 3C). For the samples incubated with At, the plots in each
290
group cluster were not very closely accumulational, the RQ samples were particularly
291
far from others, regardless of being incubated or uncultured. It suggested that jujube
292
breed of RQ was very different from the other two jujubes, thus producing different
293
metabolites after pathogen inoculations.
294
Additionally, the distribution of different culture mediums was demonstrated,
295
showing a clear separation between general PDA mediums and jujube mediums. Both
296
Pathogens, Aa and At that were incubated in PDA, were on the left side of the plot,
297
whereas those incubated in jujube mediums were on the right side (Figure 3A). Also,
298
the distance was closer between the same pathogens than that between the same
299
jujube breeds, indicating that metabolites difference was the larger contribution to the
300
principal component distribution.
301
Alteration of Components in Jujubes
302
The HRMS raw data was processed using XCMS online, the results showed that
303
more than 5000 ions were detected in each sample. After normalization, the pairwise
304
analysis jobs were performed between incubated samples and uncultured samples.
305
Each comparison group contained all three jujube breeds. The mean value was
306
calculated for each peak, which represent a metabolite.
307
All the metabolites were ranked by change rate from largest to smallest. The
308
metabolites with significant change rates of extracted ions were picked, some of the
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 14 of 36
Page 15 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
309
changed metabolites were listed (Table 1, 2, 3 and 4 in the Supporting Information).
310
Among them, some components in jujubes were selected. Both pathogens, Aa and At,
311
caused significant reduction of the components including organic acids, alkaloids and
312
amino acids, however, At did not change the levels of flavonoids and saponins (Table
313
1). Jervine and 2-methylbutanoic acid were the same decreased components between
314
them, still, jujubes incubated with Aa showed a higher changed rate. Also, metabolites
315
with increased level were also picked in two groups, compared to the uncultured
316
jujubes, flavonoid and glycerol phosphate were included (Table 2). The flavonoids in
317
increased components included naringenin, theaflavin, shoyuflavone B, etc., and
318
naringenin was the common flavonoids for two pathogens (Table 3 and 4).
319
Interestingly, isoflavone was a flavonoid with reduced level, however, the level of its
320
derivative, licoisoflavone, increased, suggesting a transformation for the flavonoid
321
forms after incubation with Aa.
322
Early studies on plant soft-rot diseases showed a decline in plant amino acids
323
during infection(24), whereas that several amino acid biosynthesis genes were
324
overexpressed during fusarium crown rot(25), the amounts of triterpenes and fatty
325
acids were significantly increased in grape berries with noble rot(26). Overall, all the
326
detectable responses of metabolite alterations related to pathogen perception and
327
defense signaling. Previous studies were focused on the pathology and plant
328
responses, for example, in the leaf spot of withania somnifera plant, the levels of total
329
alkaloids increased, whereas the levels of certain types of alkaloids decreased(27).
330
Different from in vivo experiments, our in vitro studies revealed that the levels of most
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
331
alkaloids decreased, particularly, it is the first time to observe a decrease of the
332
amount of saponins. Two organic acids, jasmonic acid and salicylic acid, were both
333
identified to increase plant resistance to Fusarium, but not Alternaria(28). Our results
334
may suggest that Alternaria can severely damage the plant components, including
335
organic acids.
336
Profile of Metabolites Emersion and Components Alteration
337
The results of the pairwise jobs were displayed in the volcano plots. Over 5000
338
ions of each jujube sample were scattered with its fold change and statistically
339
significant difference. The result of jujube mediums incubated with two pathogens
340
were in agreement with the previous experiments, the fold change of Aa was larger
341
than that of At, regardless of the component levels (Figure 4). The heatmap also
342
confirmed that after Aa incubation, original component levels in jujubes significantly
343
decreased and new metabolites appeared. Each variation was much more than that of
344
the samples incubated with At. It suggested that the predominant pathogenic
345
Alternaria spp. in the jujube black spot disease was Aa, which produced more
346
Alternaria toxins. The metabolic profiles of three jujube breeds were displayed
347
(Figure 5), all content values were equal to the average value. Compared to the
348
average sample of three breed of uncultured jujube mediums, the samples incubated in
349
HT showed a less decrease for those with high contents in origin.al samples, and the
350
samples incubated in RQ showed a higher variation for all substances in original
351
samples, which represents more metabolites emerged for both pathogens and more
352
jujube components consumption in RQ jujube. And it confirmed again that RQ jujube
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 16 of 36
Page 17 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
353
was different with other two breed jujubes, substances in RQ could stimulate the
354
growth of pathogens better than others, producing more secondary metabolites.
355
It was a field study that jujube black spot disease occurred more frequently in HT
356
rather than RQ jujubes. Interestingly, the simulation model of Alternaria jujube black
357
spot disease in experimental conditions was not identical with that from the field
358
investigation, on the contrary, more metabolites emerged and components altered in
359
RQ jujubes. Possibly, the results of HSTs may provide an explanation that HSTs were
360
only found in HT and HM, not in RQ, leading to the rare invasion of two isolates in
361
RQ. We know that Alternaria black spot disease was a host-specific disease, different
362
from other plant diseases. It was truly coincident that Alternaria black spot disease in
363
Xinjiang jujubes had never been reported till recent decades, and it only infected some
364
certain fruits. Therefore, it is obviously that Alternaria isolates have evolved to infect
365
Xinjiang jujubes. We predicted that black spot disease in RQ can also be as severe as
366
HT in the late few years and new Alternaria strains in favor of RQ may finally appear.
367
In conclusion, this study was the first report about the Alternaria toxins and
368
metabolic profile of pathogens in jujube black spot disease. Our study also makes a
369
comparison of components variation in three breeds of Xinjiang jujube, China.
370
Although it has not been reported, Alternaria jujube black spot disease has been
371
arisen for the past several years in Xinjiang. We performed a simulation study about
372
the pathogen invasion in jujube. From the metabolic profile to the secondary
373
metabolites particularly Alternaria toxins, after incubation, two main Alternaria spp.
374
have different pathogenic effects on Xinjiang jujubes, generating different Alternaria
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
375
toxins and metabolic profiles. Additionally, as the predominant jujube breeds in
376
Chinese market, HM, HT, and RQ showed potentials with predisposition to the
377
Alternaria spp. Although RQ can provide more nutrients, black spot disease has rare
378
incidence in RQ, probably due to the host specificities of two Alternaria isolates.
379
Jujube fruits are good sources of nutrients, this study demonstrated the metabolic
380
profiles of jujube Alternaria black spot disease, opening an avenue to investigate the
381
unknown pathogenic mechanisms of Alternaria jujube black spot disease.
382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 18 of 36
Page 19 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
397 398
Abbreviations Used
399
UHPLC-Orbitrap HRMS, ultra-high performance liquid chromatography coupled to
400
Orbitrap high-resolution mass spectrometry; HM, jujube of Hami Huang; HT, jujube
401
of Hetian Jun; RQ, jujube of Ruoqiang Hui; Aa, Alternaria alternata; At, Alternaria
402
tenuissima; NHST, nonspecific toxin; HST, host-selective toxin; TeA, tenuazonic
403
acid; AOH, alternariol; AME, alternariol monomethyl ether; ALT, altenuene; TEN,
404
tentoxin; ACT, Alternaria citri toxin; AF, Alternaria fries toxin; AK, Alternaria
405
kikuchiana toxin; AL, Alternaria lycopersici toxin; LC-MS, liquid chromatography-
406
mass spectrometry; PDA, potato dextrose agar medium; PCA, principal component
407
analysis; MRM, multiple reaction monitoring; TIC, total extracted ion chromatogram.
408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
419 420 421 422
Acknowledgments We thank Yuanhong Shan in the Core Facility Centre of the Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology for LTQ-Orbitrap mass spectrometry assistance.
423 424
Funding Sources
425
1. The authors highly appreciate the financial support from National Natural Science
426
Foundation of China (31471661)
427
2. Project supported by the National Science Foundation for Young Scholars of China
428
(31601575)
429
3. Study on Occurrence and Prevention of Alternaria Toxins in Xinjiang Jujube,
430
P161210005, 2016.07-2018.06, the Urumqi Talent Project Plan
431
4. The Evaluation and Detection of Mycotoxin Contamination in Xinjiang Jujube,
432
2017.01-2018.12, Basic Scientific Research of Public Welfare Research Institutes in
433
the Autonomous Region
434 435
Supporting Information Description
436
Brief descriptions in nonsentence format listing the contents of the files supplied as
437
Supporting Information. TIC of jujube powder culture mediums, confirmation of two
438
NHSTs, Orbitrap HRMS chromatograms of two HSTs, production of Alternaria toxins
439
produced by two pathogens in different culture mediums; Lists of metabolites with
440
increased or decreased level after incubation with pathogens.
441
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 20 of 36
Page 21 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
442 443
References
444
1.
445
Spot Caused by Alternaria alternate on Aronia melanocarpa in Korea. Plant Dis. 2016, 100,
446
1011-1011.
447
2.
448
phylogenetic lineage of Alternaria alternata causing citrus brown spot in China. Fungal Biol
449
2015, 119, 320-30.
450
3.
451
Identification and community dynamics of fungi associated with root, crown, and foot rot of
452
field pea in western Canada. Eur. J. Plant Pathol. 2017, 147, 489-500.
453
4.
454
Peever, T. L., Signatures of Recombination in Clonal Lineages of the Citrus Brown Spot
455
Pathogen, Alternaria alternata sensu lato. Phytopathology 2013, 103, 741-749.
456
5.
457
Yamamoto, M.; Otani, H., Host-selective toxins produced by the plant pathogenic fungus
458
Alternaria alternata. Fems Microbiol Rev 2013, 37, 44-66.
459
6.
460
pathogenicity and toxin production in Tangerine pathotype of Alternaria alternata the causal
461
agent of citrus brown spot in Iran. Phytopathology 2010, 100, S6-S6.
462
7.
463
of fruit rot of strawberry caused by an Alternaria sp in Taiwan. Plant Dis. 2008, 92, 1248-
Kwon, J. H.; Kang, D. W.; Lee, S. Y.; Choi, O.; Kim, J., First Report of Brown Leaf
Huang, F.; Fu, Y.; Nie, D.; Stewart, J. E.; Peever, T. L.; Li, H., Identification of a novel
Taheri, A. E.; Chatterton, S.; Foroud, N. A.; Gossen, B. D.; McLaren, D. L.,
Stewart, J. E.; Thomas, K. A.; Lawrence, C. B.; Dang, H.; Pryor, B. M.; Timmer, L. M.;
Tsuge, T.; Harimoto, Y.; Akimitsu, K.; Ohtani, K.; Kodama, M.; Akagi, Y.; Egusa, M.;
Amini, N.; Kakvan, N.; Zamanizadeh, H.; Hajmansoor, S., Relationship between
Ko, Y.; Chen, C. Y.; Yao, K. S.; Liu, C. W.; Lin, C. H.; Maruthasalam, S., First report
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
464
1248.
465
8.
466
Alternaria alternata apple pathotype (A-mali) causes black spot of European pear. Eur. J.
467
Plant Pathol. 2016, 145, 787-795.
468
9.
469
Comparative Evaluation of Biochemical Changes in Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.)
470
Infected by Alternaria alternata and Its Toxic Metabolites (TeA, AOH, and AME). Frontiers in
471
plant science 2016, 7, 1408.
472
10.
473
of chinese jujube. Food chemistry 2007, 103, 454-460.
474
11.
475
of Current Knowledge of Fruit Composition and Health Benefits. Journal of agricultural and
476
food chemistry 2013, 61, 3351-3363.
477
12.
478
capacities of the ethanolic extract of different tissues of jujube (Ziziphus jujuba Mill.) from
479
China. Food Chem. Toxicol. 2010, 48, 1461-1465.
480
13.
481
Zizyphus jujube fruit on carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatic injury in mice by anti-oxidative
482
activities. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2009, 122, 555-560.
483
14.
484
C.; Chen, Y. F., Possible mechanism involved in the sedative activity of jujubasaponins I in
485
mice. CNS neuroscience & therapeutics 2013, 19, 282-4.
Tanahashi, M.; Nakano, T.; Akamatsu, H.; Kodama, M.; Otani, H.; Osaki-Oka, K.,
Meena, M.; Zehra, A.; Dubey, M. K.; Aamir, M.; Gupta, V. K.; Upadhyay, R. S.,
Li, J.-W.; Fan, L.-P.; Ding, S.-D.; Ding, X.-L., Nutritional composition of five cultivars
Gao, Q.-H.; Wu, C.-S.; Wang, M., The Jujube (Ziziphus Jujuba Mill.) Fruit: A Review
Zhang, H.; Jiang, L.; Ye, S.; Ye, Y.; Ren, F., Systematic evaluation of antioxidant
Shen, X.; Tang, Y.; Yang, R.; Yu, L.; Fang, T.; Duan, J.-a., The protective effect of
Shi, G. B.; Wu, Q.; Zhang, B.; Sun, X. H.; Zong, W. T.; Zhao, X. R.; Xin, Y.; Zhao, Q.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 22 of 36
Page 23 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
486
15.
487
Ziziphus jujuba in mouse models of anxiety. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2000, 72, 435-
488
441.
489
16.
490
Amino Acids, Flavonoids, Total Phenolics, and Antioxidative Activities of Jujube (Ziziphus
491
jujuba) Fruits and Seeds Harvested from Plants Grown in Korea. Journal of agricultural and
492
food chemistry 2011, 59, 6594-6604.
493
17.
494
( Ziziphus jujuba Mill.) on the contents of sugars, organic acids, alpha-tocopherol, beta-
495
carotene, and phenolic compounds. Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2012, 60,
496
9642-8.
497
18.
498
after ultrasonic pretreatment revealed by high-performance liquid chromatography-linear ion
499
trap/Orbitrap high-resolution mass spectrometry. Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
500
2014, 62, 2522-30.
501
19.
502
by cranberry procyanidins in plasma of female rats using (1) H NMR and UHPLC-Q-Orbitrap-
503
HRMS global metabolomics approaches. Mol Nutr Food Res 2015, 59, 2107-18.
504
20.
505
in chlorinated water by liquid chromatography coupled to quadrupole-Orbitrap mass
506
spectrometry: Identification and quantification of by-products in real water samples. The
507
Science of the total environment 2015, 506–507, 36-45.
Peng, W. H.; Hsieh, M. T.; Lee, Y. S.; Lin, Y. C.; Liao, J., Anxiolytic effect of seed of
Choi, S.-H.; Ahn, J.-B.; Kozukue, N.; Levin, C. E.; Friedman, M., Distribution of Free
Gao, Q. H.; Wu, C. S.; Wang, M.; Xu, B. N.; Du, L. J., Effect of drying of jujubes
Zhang, Q.; Tu, Z.; Wang, H.; Huang, X.; Shi, Y.; Sha, X.; Xiao, H., Improved glycation
Liu, H.; Garrett, T. J.; Tayyari, F.; Gu, L., Profiling the metabolome changes caused
Negreira, N.; López de Alda, M.; Barceló, D., Degradation of the cytostatic etoposide
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 24 of 36
508
21.
509
A.; Pascali, V. L., Screening for exogenous androgen anabolic steroids in human hair by
510
liquid chromatography/orbitrap-high resolution mass spectrometry. Anal Chim Acta 2013, 793,
511
61-71.
512
22.
513
Platform to Process Untargeted Metabolomic Data. Anal. Chem. 2012, 84, 5035-5039.
514
23.
515
Siuzdak,
516
characterization of metabolites guided by the METLIN database. Nat. Protocols 2013, 8, 451-
517
460.
518
24.
519
Massive production of butanediol during plant infection by phytopathogenic bacteria of the
520
genera Dickeya and Pectobacterium. Molecular microbiology 2011, 82, 988-97.
521
25.
522
Colgrave, M. L.; Gardiner, D. M.; Manners, J. M.; Henry, R. J.; Kazan, K., The Fusarium
523
crown rot pathogen Fusarium pseudograminearum triggers a suite of transcriptional and
524
metabolic changes in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). Annals of botany 2017, 119, 853-
525
867.
526
26.
527
Morales-Cruz, A.; Doyle, C. L.; Ye, Z.; Allen, G.; Heymann, H.; Ebeler, S. E.; Cantu, D.,
528
Developmental and Metabolic Plasticity of White-Skinned Grape Berries in Response to
529
Botrytis cinerea during Noble Rot. Plant Physiol. 2015, 169, 2422-2443.
Strano-Rossi, S.; Castrignano, E.; Anzillotti, L.; Odoardi, S.; De-Giorgio, F.; Bermejo,
Tautenhahn, R.; Patti, G. J.; Rinehart, D.; Siuzdak, G., XCMS Online: A Web-Based
Zhu, Z.-J.; Schultz, A. W.; Wang, J.; Johnson, C. H.; Yannone, S. M.; Patti, G. J.; G.,
Liquid
chromatography
quadrupole
time-of-flight
mass
spectrometry
Effantin, G.; Rivasseau, C.; Gromova, M.; Bligny, R.; Hugouvieux-Cotte-Pattat, N.,
Powell, J. J.; Carere, J.; Fitzgerald, T. L.; Stiller, J.; Covarelli, L.; Xu, Q.; Gubler, F.;
Blanco-Ulate, B.; Amrine, K. C. H.; Collins, T. S.; Rivero, R. M.; Vicente, A. R.;
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 25 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
530
27.
531
leaf spot disease of Withania somnifera and its impact on secondary metabolites. Indian
532
journal of microbiology 2008, 48, 432-437.
533
28.
534
signalling mediates resistance of the wild tobacco Nicotiana attenuata to its native Fusarium,
535
but not Alternaria, fungal pathogens. Plant Cell and Environment 2015, 38, 572-584.
Pati, P. K.; Sharma, M.; Salar, R. K.; Sharma, A.; Gupta, A. P.; Singh, B., Studies on
Van Thi, L.; Schuck, S.; Kim, S.-G.; Weinhold, A.; Baldwin, I. T., Jasmonic acid
536 537 538
Figure Captions
539
Figure 1
540
TIC of jujube powder culture mediums before and after inoculation obtained
541
from LTQ-Obitrap HRMS. (A) Chromatograms of jujube powder extract. (B) After
542
incubation with Aa, a high intensity chromatographic peak appeared at the 12th
543
minute, some peaks attenuated. (C) After incubation with At, few new
544
chromatographic peak appeared with low intensity compared to Aa.
545 546
Figure 2
547
Orbitrap HRMS chromatograms of four NHSTs produced by two predominant
548
isolates in the jujube medium, TeA, AOH, AME and ALT. (A) NHSTs produced by
549
Aa. (B) NHSTs produced by At.
550 551
Figure 3
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
552
PCA score plots based on different experiments. (A) HT, HM and PDA were
553
incubated with two pathogens. Two isolates incubated in PDA showed a similar
554
cluster, whereas samples of HM and HT showed an obviously different distribution.
555
(B) PCA plots of samples before and after incubating with Aa, which showed
556
apparently clusters for both samples. (C) PCA plots of samples before and after
557
incubating with At, which showed an overlap in samples with RQ jujube.
558 559 560
Figure 4
561
Metabolite profile of incubated samples before and after incubation with two
562
isolates. All values equal to arithmetic mean. (A) Volcano plot of changed metabolites
563
in jujubes samples incubated with Aa. (B) Volcano plot of changed metabolites in
564
jujubes samples incubated with At. (C) Heatmap of metabolites profile before and
565
after incubation. Samples incubated with Aa (Jujube_aa) showed much more changed
566
metabolites in both increase and decrease compared to At (Jujube_at).
567 568
Figure 5
569
Metabolite profile of three jujubes after incubation with pathogens. All values
570
equal to arithmetic mean. (A) HM jujube; (B) HT jujube; (C) RQ jujube. Each
571
displays an average level, and the change rate was ordered: HM < HT < RQ. (D)
572
Heatmap of changed profile in three jujube breeds after incubation. HM and HT
573
jujubes were more closely similar in reply to the pathogens inoculation, whereas RQ
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 26 of 36
Page 27 of 36
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
574
jujube showed greater amount and change rate of metabolites.
575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582
Tables
583
Table 1
584
Major components with decreased level after incubation with Aa. metabolites
name isoflavone
flavonoid
saponin
organic acid
alkaloid
amino acid
Others
fold change [log2(jujube/jujube_aa)] 3.64
dihydroxy-6,7,4'-trimethoxyflavone 8-glucoside 7,4'-dihydroxyflavone 7-rutinoside
7.68** 5.79
p-value 0.292 0.004 0.280
oenanthoside A
4.00**
0.005
isopentyl gentiobioside
3.98
0.177
perilloside E
3.88
0.175
2-methylbutanoic acid
9.34
0.184
N-palmitoyl-l-serine phosphoric acid
7.45
0.140
jervine
11.64
0.196
colchicine salicylate
3.66
0.169
Caranine
7.67
0.168
Ala Lys Thr Trp
7.19*
0.018
Lys Ser Trp Trp
3.91
0.054
Asp Ile Val Tyr
7.73
0.056
His Arg Val Val
7.52*
0.016
Phe Pro Pro Pro
5.32*
0.016
dihydrojasmonic acid, methyl ester
5.49**
0.003
corycavamine 4-benzoyl-1,3,5,7-tetraphenylheptane-1,7-dione
5.27*
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
4.76**
0.042 0.001
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoro-2-(iodomethyl)propane
Page 28 of 36
3.75*
0.013
585
The fold changes were calculated using the formula log2(jujube/jujube_aa), *p