The Journal of Antibiotics
Online ISSN : 1881-1469
Print ISSN : 0021-8820
ISSN-L : 0021-8820
TRICHOLIN, A NEW ANTIFUNGAL AGENT FROM Trichoderma viride, AND ITS ACTION IN BIOLOGICAL CONTROL OF Rhizoctonia solani
ALAN LINTZU-MIN LEEJIAN CHING RERN
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1994 Volume 47 Issue 7 Pages 799-805

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Abstract
Tricholin, a ribosome-inactivating protein isolated from the culture broth of Trichoderma viride, has been shown to exert fungicidal effects on Rhizoctonia solani through a multi-hit kinetic interaction. Tricholin causes a parallel cessation of growth, uptake of amino acids, and protein biosynthesis. The in vivo mode of action of tricholin on protein synthesis and cell growth appears to be attributed to the diminishing of the polysome formation in R. solani through damage to large ribosomal subunits. These results concur with previous data and prove that tricholin is an effective inhibitor of protein synthesis. The efficacy of tricholin as an antibiotic agent was estimated to have a duration of approximately 42 hours.
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© Japan Antibiotics Research Association
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