Fungicides are used to kill parasitic fungi or their .
Most fungicides that can be bought retail are sold in liquid form, the active ingredient being present at 0.08% in weaker concentrates, and as high as 0.5% for less potent fungicides. Fungicides in powdered form are usually around 90% sulfur.
Traditional fungicides are simple inorganic compounds like sulfur,C.Michael Hogan. 2011. Sulfur. Encyclopedia of Earth, eds. A.Jorgensen and C.J.Cleveland, National Council for Science and the environment, Washington DC and copper salts. While cheap, they must be applied repeatedly and are relatively ineffective. Other active ingredients in fungicides include neem oil, rosemary oil, jojoba oil, the bacterium Bacillus subtilis, and the beneficial fungus Ulocladium oudemansii.
In some cases, the pathogen evolves resistance to multiple fungicides, a phenomenon known as cross resistance. These additional fungicides typically belong to the same chemical family, act in the same way, or have a similar mechanism for detoxification. Sometimes negative cross-resistance occurs, where resistance to one chemical class of fungicides increases sensitivity to a different chemical class of fungicides. This has been seen with carbendazim and diethofencarb. Also possible is resistance to two chemically different fungicides by separate mutation events. For example, Botrytis cinerea is resistant to both azoles and dicarboximide fungicides.
A common mechanism for acquiring resistance is alteration of the target enzyme. For example, Black Sigatoka, an economically important pathogen of banana, is resistant to the QoI fungicides, due to a single nucleotide change resulting in the replacement of one amino acid (glycine) by another (alanine) in the target protein of the QoI fungicides, cytochrome b. It is presumed that this disrupts the binding of the fungicide to the protein, rendering the fungicide ineffective. Upregulation of target genes can also render the fungicide ineffective. This is seen in DMI-resistant strains of Venturia inaequalis.
Resistance to fungicides can also be developed by efficient efflux of the fungicide out of the cell. Septoria tritici has developed multiple drug resistance using this mechanism. The pathogen had five ABC-type transporters with overlapping substrate specificities that together work to pump toxic chemicals out of the cell.
In addition to the mechanisms outlined above, fungi may also develop metabolic pathways that circumvent the target protein, or acquire that enable the metabolism of the fungicide to a harmless substance.
Fungicides that are at risk of losing their potency due to resistance include Strobilurin such as azoxystrobin.
Fungicide residues have been found on food for human consumption, mostly from post-harvest treatments.
Nonspecific
Specific
Nucleic acid metabolism
Cytoskeleton and motor proteins
Respiration
Amino acid and protein synthesis
Signal transduction
Lipid synthesis / membrane integrity
Melanin synthesis in cell wall
Sterol biosynthesis in membranes
Cell wall biosynthesis
Host plant defence induction
Mycoviruses
Resistance
Fungicide resistance management
Safety
(accessed Jan. 13, 2019)
See also
Further reading
External links
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