Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich proteins. Filamentous fungi encode a wide repertoire of AFPs belonging to different phylogenetic classes, which offer a great potential to develop new antifungals for the control of pathogenic fungi. The fungus Penicillium expansum is one of the few reported to encode three AFPs each belonging to a different phylogenetic class (A, B, and C). In this work, the production of the putative AFPs from P. expansum was evaluated, but only the representative of class A, PeAfpA, was identified in culture supernatants of the native fungus. The biotechnological production of PeAfpB and PeAfpC was achieved in Penicillium chrysogenum with the P. chrysogenum-based...
ABSTRACT Filamentous fungi produce small cysteine-rich proteins with potent, specific antifungal act...
Apples are prone to be contaminated with Penicillium expansum, which produces the mycotoxin patulin,...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) from ascomycete fungi could help the development of antimycotics. However...
Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich protein...
Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich protein...
Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich protein...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) offer a great potential as new biofungicides to control deleterious fungi...
Filamentous fungi encode distinct antifungal proteins (AFPs) that offer great potential to develop n...
Penicillium phytopathogenic species provoke severe postharvest disease and economic losses. Penicill...
Penicillium phytopathogenic species provoke severe postharvest disease and economic losses. Penicill...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) from filamentous fungi offer the potential to control fungal infections t...
Many filamentous fungi are postharvest and destructive plant pathogens and are thus responsible for ...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) are promising antimicrobial compounds that represent a feasible alternati...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) from Ascomycetes are small cysteine-rich proteins that are abundantly sec...
Fungal antifungal proteins (AFPs) have attracted attention as novel biofungicides. Their exploitatio...
ABSTRACT Filamentous fungi produce small cysteine-rich proteins with potent, specific antifungal act...
Apples are prone to be contaminated with Penicillium expansum, which produces the mycotoxin patulin,...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) from ascomycete fungi could help the development of antimycotics. However...
Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich protein...
Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich protein...
Antifungal proteins of fungal origin (AFPs) are small, secreted, cationic, and cysteine-rich protein...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) offer a great potential as new biofungicides to control deleterious fungi...
Filamentous fungi encode distinct antifungal proteins (AFPs) that offer great potential to develop n...
Penicillium phytopathogenic species provoke severe postharvest disease and economic losses. Penicill...
Penicillium phytopathogenic species provoke severe postharvest disease and economic losses. Penicill...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) from filamentous fungi offer the potential to control fungal infections t...
Many filamentous fungi are postharvest and destructive plant pathogens and are thus responsible for ...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) are promising antimicrobial compounds that represent a feasible alternati...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) from Ascomycetes are small cysteine-rich proteins that are abundantly sec...
Fungal antifungal proteins (AFPs) have attracted attention as novel biofungicides. Their exploitatio...
ABSTRACT Filamentous fungi produce small cysteine-rich proteins with potent, specific antifungal act...
Apples are prone to be contaminated with Penicillium expansum, which produces the mycotoxin patulin,...
Antifungal proteins (AFPs) from ascomycete fungi could help the development of antimycotics. However...