Coniella fragariae

Coniella fragariae is a plant pathogen. It is known to be pathogenic on eucalypts in a number of countries, including Brazil, India, China and Australia.[1] Chemical constitution study showed azaphilone (coniellins A–G) were the main secondary metabolites from this fungus. [2][3]

Coniella fragariae
Scientific classification
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C. fragariae
Binomial name
Coniella fragariae
(Oudem.) B. Sutton, (1977)
Synonyms

Coniothyrium fragariae Oudem., (1883)

Causal agentsConiella fragariae
Hostseucalypts
DistributionBrazil, India, China and Australia

References

  1. Keane PJ, Kile GA, Podger FD. "Diseases and pathogens of eucalypts" (2000) CSIRO Publishing
  2. Yu, Haiqian; Sperlich, Julia; Mándi, Attila; Kurtán, Tibor; Dai, Haofu; Teusch, Nicole; Guo, Zhi-Yong; Zou, Kun; Liu, Zhen (2018-11-26). "Azaphilone Derivatives from the Fungus Coniella fragariae Inhibit NF-κB Activation and Reduce Tumor Cell Migration". Journal of Natural Products. 81 (11): 2493–2500. doi:10.1021/acs.jnatprod.8b00540. ISSN 0163-3864. PMID 30354103.
  3. Yu, Haiqian; Sperlich, Julia; Höfert, Simon-Patrick; Janiak, Christoph; Teusch, Nicole; Stuhldreier, Fabian; Wesselborg, Sebastian; Wang, Chenyin; Kassack, Matthias U. (2019-09-01). "Azaphilone pigments and macrodiolides from the coprophilous fungus Coniella fragariae". Fitoterapia. 137: 104249. doi:10.1016/j.fitote.2019.104249. ISSN 0367-326X. PMID 31247219.



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