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Review

Present Status and Perspective on the Future Use of Aflatoxin Biocontrol Products

by
Juan Moral
1,*,
Maria Teresa Garcia-Lopez
1,
Boris X. Camiletti
2,
Ramon Jaime
3,
Themis J. Michailides
3,
Ranajit Bandyopadhyay
4 and
Alejandro Ortega-Beltran
4,*
1
Departamento de Agronomía, ETSIAM, Universidad de Córdoba, Campus de Rabanales, 14014 Córdoba, Spain
2
Microbiología Agrícola, FCA-UNC, IMBIV-CONICET, Córdoba X5000HUA, Argentina
3
Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center, Department of Plant Pathology, University of California–Davis, Parlier, CA 93648, USA
4
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, PMB 5320, Ibadan 200001, Nigeria
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Submission received: 24 February 2020 / Revised: 18 March 2020 / Accepted: 25 March 2020 / Published: 1 April 2020
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Etiology and Control of Crop Diseases)

Abstract

:
Aflatoxin contamination of important food and feed crops occurs frequently in warm tropical and subtropical regions. The contamination is caused mainly by Aspergillus flavus and A. parasiticus. Aflatoxin contamination negatively affects health and trade sectors and causes economic losses to agricultural industries. Many pre- and post-harvest technologies can limit aflatoxin contamination but may not always reduce aflatoxin concentrations below tolerance thresholds. However, the use of atoxigenic (non-toxin producing) isolates of A. flavus to competitively displace aflatoxin producers is a practical strategy that effectively limits aflatoxin contamination in crops from field to plate. Biocontrol products formulated with atoxigenic isolates as active ingredients have been registered for use in the US, several African nations, and one such product is in final stages of registration in Italy. Many other nations are seeking to develop biocontrol products to protect their crops. In this review article we present an overview of the biocontrol technology, explain the basis to select atoxigenic isolates as active ingredients, describe how formulations are developed and tested, and describe how a biocontrol product is used commercially. Future perspectives on formulations of aflatoxin biocontrol products, along with other important topics related to the aflatoxin biocontrol technology are also discussed.

1. Introduction

1.1. The Aflatoxin Problem

Aflatoxin contamination of economically important food and feed crops occurs frequently in tropical and subtropical regions [1,2]. Susceptible crops include maize, groundnut, cottonseed, tree nuts, figs, and chilies, among others [3,4,5]. Aflatoxins are synthetized alone or with other mycotoxins by several Aspergillus species, most of them belonging to section Flavi (Table 1) [6]. However, A. flavus and A. parasiticus are the species most commonly associated with aflatoxin contamination of crops [4,7]. In general, toxigenic members of A. flavus produce aflatoxins B1 and B2 (blue fluorescent), while toxigenic members of A. parasiticus produce aflatoxins G1 and G2 (green fluorescent) in addition to B1 and B2 [7]. The most potent of the four aflatoxins is B1. The four types of aflatoxins are associated with a myriad of health threats including stunting, impaired food conversion, immunosuppression, liver cancer, and, under acute exposure, death [8]. Similar negative impacts and low productivity occur in livestock when their feeds contain unsafe aflatoxin levels [9,10]. Most mycotoxin alerts reported in the European Union by the Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed [11] are raised by crop lots contaminated with aflatoxins, followed by ochratoxins (Figure 1).
The magnitude of the aflatoxin contamination problem differs between developed and developing nations. Regulations and strict limits (tolerance levels) are enforced in developed nations to protect consumers from contaminated foods and feeds [12,13,14,15]. In contrast, regulations in emerging and developing nations, if they exist, are poorly enforced with few exceptions. Examples of exceptions include cases when the contamination levels reach a national health emergency, such as maize destruction in areas of Kenya, and the banning of several brands of maize flour and peanut butter in Kenya, Rwanda, and Uganda [16,17,18,19]. Therefore, in emerging and developing nations, most contaminated crops enter the food and feed chains, regardless of their aflatoxin content [3,20,21,22,23,24,25]. The absence of mechanisms to enforce aflatoxin tolerance levels results in chronic aflatoxin exposure with subsequent lack of access to markets, poverty, low well-being, poor economic growth, being among other constraints in the affected populations [2,26,27]. For all these reasons, in the developing world, contamination of food and feeds with aflatoxins has a profound negative impact on personal, social, and national development opportunities.

1.2. Technologies to Limit Aflatoxin Crop Contamination

The notion that aflatoxin contamination is a problem restricted to post-harvest stages still incorrectly permeates in certain regions and sectors across the globe. Aflatoxin contamination usually starts in the field and, if post-harvest handling is deficient, aflatoxin concentrations can dramatically increase during storage [22,24,26,29,30]. Several cultural practices and technologies that prevent or limit the contamination process in the field are available for both highly mechanized and small-scale agricultural systems. Among the pre-harvest technologies are the use of atoxigenic isolates of A. flavus as biocontrol agents, insect control, timely harvesting, and use of less susceptible cultivars, including, in the case of maize and cotton, Bt-cultivars [31,32].
Regarding post-harvest technologies, sorting has been described as a successful practice to reduce aflatoxin contamination in grain (i.e., maize) and nut lots (i.e., groundnut, pistachio, almond). Removal of nuts and grains showing morphological characteristics associated with aflatoxin contamination (e.g., shriveled, discolored, early split, worm galleries) considerably reduces aflatoxin content in a sorted batch [33,34,35]. Chemical detoxification is mostly limited to human food, but some compounds (e.g., ammonium, hydrated bentonite, magnetic carbon) can reduce aflatoxin concentration in the final product [36]. Finally, other practices such as crop drying, improved sanitation, controlled processing and storage conditions, significantly contribute to reduce aflatoxin accumulation [22,24,26,30,37,38,39,40].
Due to the complexity and the multitude of factors affecting the aflatoxin contamination process, none of those technologies used individually provides complete protection. Rather than using a single or few somehow effective technologies, it is necessary to integrate aflatoxin management strategies addressing the entire crop production and distribution chain [14,41].

1.3. Biocontrol as a Tool to Decrease Crop Aflatoxin Contamination

Genetic diversity is large and aflatoxin production potential is highly variable within and among aflatoxin-producing species [7,42]. For example, populations of A. flavus are composed of aflatoxin producers and non-toxin-producing isolates (syn.: atoxigenic) (see 2.2). A. flavus is divided into two morphotypes, L and S, according to the size of sclerotia. The L morphotype produces few, large sclerotia (>400 μm) while the S morphotype produces large numbers of small sclerotia (<400 μm) [43]. Isolates of the L morphotype are highly variable in aflatoxin-producing potential with some of them being atoxigenic, while S morphotype isolates consistently produce high aflatoxin concentrations [44]. As with several fungal species, A. flavus populations can be classified in different vegetative compatibility groups (VCGs). Isolates belonging to the same VCG are genetically more closely related than isolates belonging to other VCGs. There are certain VCGs composed solely of atoxigenic isolates and those genetic groups are good candidates for biocontrol products that, when applied in the field at the right stage, can result in decreased aflatoxin content in the crop [45,46].
Using atoxigenic A. flavus isolates as an active ingredient in biocontrol formulations is a safe, low-cost, easy-to-use, and effective technology to protect crops from aflatoxin contamination. Although it is highly effective, the use of biocontrol products must be combined with key aflatoxin management strategies available to farmers in any given region (e.g., technologies to reduce plant stress, to promote rapid drying, and optimal storage of the crop) to minimize the risk of contamination. The process of selecting atoxigenic isolates of A. flavus to use as biocontrol agents should follow a series of well-established steps ranging from selecting native and well-adapted isolates, determining the reasons for their inability to produce toxins (e.g., aflatoxins, cyclopiazonic acid [CPA]), and assessing their ability to out-compete aflatoxin producers under controlled and field conditions (Figure 2). Another criterion for selecting the most competitive isolates in field conditions is to evaluate their abilities to spread from soil to crops [47].
When applied in the field, at the right crop phenological stage, atoxigenic biocontrol isolates displace aflatoxin-producers resulting in lowering infection rates by the native toxigenic isolates. Biocontrol treatment allows the production of crops with little to no aflatoxin, even in areas where both the environment and the pathogen population (density and toxigenicity) are conducive to crop infection and contamination. Frequently, treated crops contain undetectable aflatoxin content. Treatment allows producing crops that meet national and international premium market aflatoxin standards (below tolerance levels) that would be very difficult to achieve in the absence of the biocontrol treatment [48,49,50,51,52,53].

1.4. From Single to Multiple Isolates

The United States Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research Service (USDA–ARS) developed the first biocontrol product, Aspergillus flavus AF36, which contains as the active ingredient an atoxigenic isolate native to Yuma, Arizona, US [54,55,56]. The biocontrol product AF36 was initially registered with the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) for use in cotton fields in Arizona and California, and subsequently the registration label was expanded to treat maize in Arizona and Texas [57]. AF36 is produced and distributed by the Arizona Cotton Research and Protection Council [48]. During a 10-year research effort, it was found both that VCG YV36, to which AF36 belongs, was the atoxigenic VCG most commonly encountered in California and that AF36 was successful in limiting aflatoxin content in commercially produced pistachio. Therefore, USEPA granted registration of AF36 for use in pistachio grown in California and Arizona (2012), and eventually (2017) in almond and fig in California [15,51]. The biocontrol product AF36 is now used in several states across the US, which makes it the most widely used aflatoxin biocontrol product in the world. A second biocontrol product, Afla-guard®, containing a different atoxigenic A. flavus isolate (NRRL21882) as an active ingredient, was registered with USEPA for use in maize and groundnut in the US [58]. The product Afla-guard® is commercialized by Syngenta Crop Protection, Inc. (Greensboro, NC, USA) and has been used in experimental groundnut fields in Turkey [59].
The International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) and USDA–ARS, in collaboration with national and international institutions, adapted and improved the aflatoxin biocontrol technology for use in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Several aflatoxin biocontrol products that effectively reduce crop aflatoxin content have been developed under the trade name Aflasafe® [26,53], and several of those are currently commercialized in different nations in Africa [60]. Each Aflasafe® product contains, as active ingredient fungi, four atoxigenic isolates belonging to distinct VCGs native to the target nation. A shift from a single to a multiple-isolate product was made to exploit the repertoire of qualities that diverse atoxigenic isolates have in relationship to competitiveness and adaptation to diverse crops, environments, and agricultural practices [26,49,61]. Using isolates belonging to atoxigenic VCGs widely distributed and successful across environments and crops has proven to be effective in producing crops with low aflatoxin content [46,47,53]. In natural conditions, it has been noted that the dominance of single A. flavus VCGs over single and multiple areas, over multiple years, is transient [62]. Thus, use of multiple isolates may increase the chances to promote diverse atoxigenic communities over a longer-term.
USDA–ARS has developed a multi-isolate biocontrol product for use in maize grown in Texas, FourSure™, which contain, as active ingredients, four atoxigenic isolates native to Texas [63]. The US Texas Corn Producers Board is seeking the registration of FourSure [64]. In California, several atoxigenic VCGs have been identified by the University of California–Davis (UC Davis) in collaboration with USDA-ARS and different tree-nut growing organizations, and isolates in those VCGs are valuable resources as constituents of multi-isolate products to treat tree nut crops [15,65,66]. In North Carolina, combinations of atoxigenic strains have been tested in a field of a research station [67]. Research programs at UC Davis and collaborating universities in Argentina and Spain have identified through laboratory tests, atoxigenic A. flavus isolates with potential as biocontrol agents for use on those nations, but the efficacy of those isolates has not been tested under field conditions [68,69,70]. Similarly, studies for identifying potential A. flavus biocontrol isolates are being conducted in other countries including, China [71], India [72], Thailand [73,74], and Serbia [75].

2. Basis for Selection of Atoxigenic Isolates as Biocontrol Agents

2.1. Use of Native Fungi

Biocontrol formulations containing atoxigenic fungi native to target regions should have a greater chance to be more effective because of their adaptation to the environment, cropping system, and climatic and soil conditions [46,49]. Native atoxigenic isolates generally possess superior abilities to compete against other native microorganisms for local resources. Also, native fungi as active ingredients of products allow faster regulatory approval compared to exotic fungi [26,49]. As there are many atoxigenic A. flavus isolates in all nations where aflatoxin-producers thrive, there is no need to introduce exotic organisms. Moreover, native fungi are beneficial germplasm that governments can use/license in a manner considered the most appropriate to reduce aflatoxin contamination and aflatoxin exposure [49,61].

2.2. Membership in VCGs That Are Completely Atoxigenic

An important criterion when selecting atoxigenic fungi to develop a biocontrol product is that each candidate isolate must belong to a widely distributed VCG composed only of atoxigenic members [46,76,77]. Microbiological, chemical, and molecular tools are employed to find atoxigenic VCGs. Evaluation of aflatoxin-production abilities of a large number of A. flavus isolates from a given region is required; thousands of vegetative compatibility tests must be performed, and molecular analyses using simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers must be done to reveal whether a VCG has only atoxigenic members. These activities are both resource intensive and time-consuming but allow detecting VCGs composed exclusively of atoxigenic members.

2.3. Lesions in the Aflatoxin Biosynthesis Gene Cluster

About 30 clustered genes, and more than 20 enzymatic reactions, are needed for aflatoxin production [78,79]. In all aflatoxin-producing species, the aflatoxin biosynthesis cluster is located within a 75-kb region of chromosome 3 [78]. Genes in the cluster may be affected by different types of mutations, including substitutions, insertions, deletions, and frameshifts that can result in atoxigenicity. Deletions can be divided into specific deletions, affecting one gene, or large deletions affecting multiple or all aflatoxin biosynthesis genes [80,81]. For example, the aflatoxin and CPA biosynthesis gene clusters are entirely deleted in NRRL21882 [81] and one of the isolates, A. flavus Og0222, in the Aflasafe product used in Nigeria, [45]. Sometimes a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) is sufficient to confer atoxigenicity. A nonsense mutation (substitution: G-A) in the polyketide synthase gene is enough to confer atoxigenicity to the biocontrol isolate AF36, although there are many other mutations and deletions in the aflatoxin gene cluster of AF36 [45,82]. Finally, the aflatoxin gene cluster of A. oryzae, considered a domesticated species of A. flavus, shows several substitutions and frameshift mutations that result in lack of aflatoxin production [83].

2.4. Area-Wide Adaptation

Paramount is selection of atoxigenic fungi with known adaptation to target agroecosystems and their cropping systems [26]. There is large variability among VCGs in abilities to compete for crop substrates [84,85,86]. Numerous studies report isolates with potential as candidate atoxigenic biocontrol agents that were selected from small sets of isolates, and usually from relatively small areas. This can result in selection of isolates that may not be the most appropriate and widely adapted to limit aflatoxin contamination. Area-wide adaptation of atoxigenic VCGs can be revealed by examining several thousand A. flavus isolates associated with multiple crops collected in several hundred locations across a target country/region [15,26,47]. Such studies require intensive microbiological, chemical, and molecular tests.

2.5. Superior Competitiveness

In controlled conditions, atoxigenic isolates with superior ability to limit aflatoxin contamination are identified by challenging the candidate atoxigenic isolates with high aflatoxin producers in co-inoculation assays. Typically, these assays are conducted by co-inoculating mature maize grains with both atoxigenic and aflatoxin-producing isolates. Subsequently, production of aflatoxin is quantified, and reduction of aflatoxin contamination is calculated with respect to grains inoculated only with an aflatoxin producing isolate [61,77]. Competition experiments have also been conducted using almond and pistachio kernels because those were the target crops [15].
Field testing allows evaluating aflatoxin reduction abilities of candidate fungi under field conditions [50,51,52,54,58]. When selecting atoxigenic fungi for multi-isolate products, field evaluations are done by applying atoxigenic isolates individually (typically 12 isolates are tested) and then, as part of a candidate multi-isolate products [26,47,50]. An evaluation of this type allows detecting those isolates with the greatest ability to create a founding population in the soil and then to successfully move to the grains or other harvested crop product in the treated fields [47]. In Nigeria, field evaluation of a candidate product prior to large-scale efficacy trials revealed that one of the tested isolates was a poor competitor across all tested environments and therefore was replaced with an isolate with superior potential as biocontrol agent [50].

2.6. Efficacy Trials

The true value of a biocontrol product composed of single or multiple isolates as active ingredient is revealed when the product is applied in crops managed by the farmers themselves, in multiple fields (usually 300 to 500) in multiple agro-ecological zones, and during multiple years [51,87,88]. Evaluating a product under controlled conditions, in a limited number of locations can result in incorrect interpretation regarding the benefits of biocontrol and its efficacy across environments [89].
Usually, researchers conduct evaluation trials using paired fields, treated vs. untreated. When paired fields are not sufficiently separated (e.g., by a distance of >500 m), untreated fields may be affected by cross-contamination with spores of the biocontrol isolate(s) dispersed from the adjoining treated fields. This effect is much higher in a traditional block design [90]. Aflatoxin contamination data of the paired fields often does not meet the requirements (normality and outliers) for applying a statistical paired T-test. In such cases, transforming the data or using a non-parametric Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test may provide some usable results.

3. Registration of Products

Many aflatoxin biocontrol products are currently registered with national biopesticide regulators for use in various crops (Table 2). In the US, AF36 is registered for use in several crops [15,49,51], while Afla-guard® is registered for use in maize and groundnut [91]. In Africa, there are 14 atoxigenic biocontrol products registered under the tradename Aflasafe for use in maize; 13 of those products are also registered for use in groundnut, and two of those are registered for use in sorghum [53,60]. The African countries where Aflasafe products are registered are Nigeria, Kenya, Senegal, The Gambia, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique, and Malawi. The atoxigenic biocontrol product AF-X1® is in the final stages of registration for unrestricted use in maize in Italy (http://www.agronomico.com/AFX1.aspx; [52]).

4. Delivery Methods

4.1. Grains as Carriers and Nutritional Sources.

All commercially available biocontrol products are formulated using sterile grains that serve as carriers and as a nutritive source for the atoxigenic strains. Several formulations were tested at the earlier stages of biocontrol development, including inoculated rice and wheat grains, pasta granules (containing semolina, kaolin, and xanthan gum), maize flour-based granules, and alginate pellets containing several nutrients [43,92]. Spraying spore suspensions of the biocontrol agent directly to the canopy of the crop or applied as soil drenches were also tested [43,93]. However, the use of grains as carriers was found to be the best option [43,92]. Originally the formulations comprised sterilized grains colonized by the atoxigenic isolates [48,50,91,94]. Although this methodology was effective to deliver the biocontrol agent to the crop, it was expensive and slow to produce. Therefore, formulations using roasted or dehulled grains (to avoid germination) coated with a spore suspension of the biocontrol isolate(s) were developed [26,58,95]. Coated formulations lower the costs and increase the rate of product manufacture, making it more affordable for farmers.
Grain-based formulations were developed for applications in field crops (cotton, groundnut, maize) with small and closed canopies which provide good conditions for the biocontrol fungus to sporulate, but they might not be adequate for tree nut orchards with more open canopies which do not provide optimal conditions for a fungus to sporulate. Therefore, there is a need to develop alternative formulations and application methods that will deliver the biocontrol isolate(s) more efficiently in these less favorable environments.

4.2. Use of Bioplastics

To date, all commercial aflatoxin biocontrol products are formulated using grains of either barley, wheat, or sorghum as carrier of the spores of the atoxigenic isolates. Other alternatives have been sought in order to limit the use of food and feed grains. Recent studies have investigated whether coating seeds with a bioplastic containing an atoxigenic isolate may be a useful technology for delivering the biocontrol isolate in maize crops [96,97]. Before planting, maize seeds are film-coated using a starch-based bioplastic previously combined with spores of a biocontrol isolate. Moreover, chemical pesticides (insecticide or fungicides) might be added to the coating slurry for additional protection of seeds in soil. Application of the bioplastic seed-coating with spores favors initial growth of this starch-utilizing fungus, resulting in a decreased frequency of aflatoxin producers in soil. Subsequently, aflatoxin contamination of maize kernels during pre-harvest stages was reported to be reduced [97]. More studies describing key factors that may affect the effectiveness of this technology are needed to improve the performance of this formulation.

4.3. Alternative Substrates

The delivery method (i.e., barley, sorghum, or wheat grains) is the most expensive component of atoxigenic biocontrol products. In addition to bioplastics (see previous section), other substrates could be employed to reduce the production costs of the biocontrol products. This is particularly important for many smallholder resource-poor farmers, for which the cost to treat 1 ha of a crop may be prohibitive (12–18 USD, depending on the country) if they do not have access to markets paying a premium for safe crops. However, the major drawback of using grains as carriers is that they are frequently predated by ants, birds, and insects. Finding other substrates could reduce the cost of the product, have increased sporulation, and lower vulnerability to predation. The use of cassava peel pellets has been investigated to replace sorghum as a carrier and nutritive source for biocontrol isolates in West Africa, where large quantities of cassava peels are discarded daily [98]. However, spore yield on cassava peel substrate is low compared to sorghum, meaning a reduction in the effectiveness of the biocontrol product. More research is needed to determine which substrates could provide desirable features of increased sporulation under broader environmental conditions and that would be less prone to predation. Finally, two application methods without carrier have been studied. These are application of aqueous spore suspensions directly to the crop canopy or delivering the active ingredient through the irrigation system but evaluations in commercial orchards remain to be done [99].

5. Effectiveness in Crops Treated with Biocontrol Products

5.1. Effectiveness of Aflatoxin Biocontrol Agents in Different Crops

The efficacy of aflatoxin reduction by atoxigenic isolates of A. flavus has been demonstrated in various crops including maize, groundnut, cottonseed, and pistachio in the US, and maize, groundnut, and chili peppers in Africa [48,51,91,100] (Table 2). Recently, efficacy trials have been conducted in sorghum in Ghana and sunflower in Tanzania and substantial reductions in aflatoxin have been achieved (unpublished results). Results of both field experiments and commercial treatments in cotton, maize, and groundnut fields show reduction in aflatoxin contamination ranging from 70% to 100% compared to adjacent non-treated fields [48,52,87,88,101,102]. In the commodities in which aflatoxin contamination is more frequent (i.e., the proportion of grains/seeds/fruits that can be contaminated by aflatoxin is higher), the impact of biocontrol isolates on aflatoxin reduction is higher too. Conversely, when the percentage of potential points of infection is meager, which occurs in the case of tree nut crops (i.e., from 1/5000 to 1/20,000 in pistachio kernels), the aflatoxin contamination on untreated fields is highly variable (measured as the variation coefficient) and, subsequently, the impact of the biocontrol agents in reducing aflatoxin contamination is frequently low but highly variable. Figure 3 shows the relationship between reduction of aflatoxin contamination as a result of application of atoxigenic A. flavus isolates in different commodities and the variation coefficient of aflatoxin contamination in untreated fields of these crops [29,47,51,52,87,88,92,101,102].

5.2. Area-Wide Treatment for Increased Efficacy

The overall goal of aflatoxin management with atoxigenic isolates is to change the population structure, typically dominated by aflatoxin producers, by increasing the frequencies of the applied atoxigenic isolates in the target ecosystem. Once the population is composed mainly of atoxigenic isolates, the aflatoxin production potential is greatly reduced.
A single application of an aflatoxin biocontrol product, at the right phenological stage, substantially reduces aflatoxin contamination in treated crops [48,51,53]. However, sometimes the biocontrol product does not completely protect the crop from aflatoxin contamination. Several factors affect the efficacy of treatment, including poor sporulation and product loss, which restrict the full potential of the competitive exclusion and founder effect principles of the technology [95,99]. Benefits of aflatoxin biocontrol applications go beyond reducing aflatoxin in the treated crop in a single season. Thus, biocontrol applications also increase the density of atoxigenic isolates in the soil, even in neighboring fields, and the carry-over effect has the potential to displace aflatoxin producers for subsequent seasons. On the other hand, toxigenic fungi residing in soils nearby treated fields can also contaminate the treated crops in subsequent seasons. Studies of the population structure of A. flavus at the area-wide scale began in the 1990s [103,104] raising the idea that changing the population structure of the fungus at the regional scale will also reduce the aflatoxin-producing potential in the area. Implementing area-wide, long-term biocontrol programs might be the best strategy to reduce the population of aflatoxin-producing isolates for the medium- to long-term [29,48]. An area-wide and long-term aflatoxin management program will require treating most aflatoxin susceptible crops growing in the same area. However, effective aflatoxin control might be achieved with partial, booster treatments after initial application for a few years. With area-wide treatment, biocontrol products would need to be reapplied perhaps at a lower dose to maintain a population with low aflatoxin production potential in an area-wide long-term management program. However, the application frequency depends on the characteristics of each area, since areas differ in the time that the biocontrol will persist in the soil [102,104].

6. Biocontrol Performance in Future Scenarios

An understanding of the epidemiology of, and the interaction between biocontrol agents and aflatoxin producers under field conditions is essential for successful simulation modelling in future scenarios, particularly under climate change. Simulation models to predict future toxigenic and atoxigenic population scenarios to assist farmers and pest control advisers through Decision Support Systems (DSS) will be important tools. Climate changes that accompany projected increments in atmospheric CO2 can lead to a reduction in water availability in agricultural areas. Thus, by 2100, predictions indicate a rise in global temperature between 1 and 5 °C, which will affect development of crops and their capacity to adapt along with changes in the current distribution and densities of aflatoxin-producing fungi [105]. Areas affected by severe water stress (criticality ratio: withdrawals/availability of water > 0.4) will expand and the stress will intensify [106]. Changes in global precipitation, ecological, and crop system patterns may alter the compositions of Aspergillus populations and their fitness, since they are primarily influenced by temperature and soil moisture. Jaime-Garcia and Cotty [107] observed spatial and temporal variations in aflatoxin contamination depending primarily on those environmental factors. For example, soil surface temperature influences fungal communities with propagule density decreasing when daily average soil temperature is either below 18 °C or above 30 °C [108]. A. flavus S morphotype fungi are more likely to occur at a higher proportion during warmer, drier years, and consequently, increased aflatoxin concentrations in crops occur because of their high aflatoxin-producing potential [44]. Monitoring climatic parameters and crop aflatoxin accumulation across countries will contribute to a better understanding of the influences of climate change on aflatoxin contamination risks [26]. Information on the interaction between the environment and the fungal population size and structure will allow the implementation of aflatoxin management strategies based on weather events, which may include a requirement for selection of atoxigenic VCGs adapted to both hotter, drier climates and changes in cropping cycles [44].

7. Losses to Bird, Insect, or Rodent Predation

Using grains as carriers for biocontrol isolates consistently reduces aflatoxin contamination in field crops (maize, cotton, groundnut, chili peppers), where closed canopies create conditions of humidity for good sporulation of the biocontrol product when applied at the right time. However, when conditions are not conducive for rapid sporulation, the product is exposed to predation by birds, insects, ants, and rodents [29]. Under conditions found in tree nut orchards, predation of the biocontrol product is even greater since the ground is frequently bare of vegetation, leaving the product exposed to animal and insect predation. Preliminary studies conducted in California, at Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center, indicate that besides ants, other arthropods (mainly Oniscidea spp.) are implicated in the rapid loss of formulated grain carriers [99]. Dissimilar agricultural management practices (e.g., crop densities, irrigation strategies, tillage, and maintenance of vegetative cover) are essential factors affecting the fauna found in the orchard. Furthermore, grain carriers could spoil when exposed to excessive moisture in the soil, a condition that favors rapid colonization by other fungi (e.g., Fusarium spp.), thus impeding the sporulation of the biocontrol agent(s). Biocontrol efficacy can be further enhanced with innovations in formulations that improve the efficiency of sporulation and reduce the proportion of grains lost due to predation.

8. Concerns Posed for Using Biocontrol Products

Isolates used in biocontrol formulations belong to ancient, highly stable atoxigenic VCGs selected through carefully designed and elaborate microbiological, chemical, molecular, and field studies [47,50,53,76,77]. Well-planned studies have demonstrated that members of an atoxigenic VCG do not exchange genetic material with members of other VCGs (either toxigenic or atoxigenic) despite plenty of opportunities for exchange of genetic material in both treated and non-treated areas [42,76,109,110]. Clonality is the predominant mode of A. flavus reproduction. Recombination events between members of toxigenic and atoxigenic VCGs have been reported only in laboratory and field studies under specific conditions [111,112,113,114,115] and is rare in nature. Therefore, the risk for recombination and generation of toxigenic variants when applying atoxigenic isolates in the field is minimal.
No major health problems have been reported due to the use and application of biocontrol agents by field workers, but it can cause allergic reaction in some individuals. In general, workers should avoid a prolonged contact with the product through the skin and eyes, avoiding those periods in which a high concentration of spores is expected.

9. Conclusions

Whereas some researchers have critical opinion regarding biocontrol of aflatoxins [116,117,118,119,120], substantial research conducted with field and tree crops has shown that using atoxigenic isolates of A. flavus as biocontrol agents is one of the most effective pre-harvest management strategies for reducing aflatoxin contamination (Figure 3). The extensive research demonstrating the efficacy, safety, and benefits of the technology have allowed registration of several aflatoxin biocontrol products with regulatory authorities. Following registration, large-scale use is possible after developing infrastructure to produce the biocontrol product on a large-scale, developing sound commercialization strategies, transferring the technology to appropriate industries, and implementing innovative marketing and distribution channels [48,60,87]. It is worth mentioning that this management strategy is especially useful in food-insecure regions with rapidly growing populations in Africa, which also suffer major losses in agriculture due to pests and diseases [121], and where farmers’ access to other control methods is much more restricted. Hundreds of thousands of farmers and diverse crop industries benefiting from the technology consider biocontrol products as vital tools to produce crops with reduced aflatoxin contamination. The use of biocontrol and other aflatoxin management strategies allow farmers to produce safe crops for their own consumption and/or to sell to premium markets.
Aflatoxin biocontrol products have been developed for use in a fraction of the crops susceptible to aflatoxin contamination. Adapting, testing, and validating the biocontrol technology for use in other susceptible crops (e.g., sesame seed, hazelnut, millet) would provide health, trade, and economic benefits for producers, consumers, and processors of these crops.

Author Contributions

J.M. and A.O.-B. conceptualized the idea after J.M. received the invitation from the journal; A.O.-B., J.M., T.J.M., and R.B. wrote the manuscript; M.T.G.-L., B.X.C., R.J. provided input to different sections of the manuscript. A.O.-B, J.M., R.B., and T.J.M. finalized the manuscript. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

No external funding was received to write the manuscript.

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge the anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments and suggestions. J.M. was partially supported by a H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions fellowship launched by the European Union. M.T.G.-L. was supported by the SICYT foundation from Asturias. B.X.C. was partially supported by the Argentinean National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET) through a postdoctoral fellowship. J.M., M.T.G.-L., B.X.C., R.J., and T.J.M. were partially supported by the California Pistachio Research Board, the Almond Board of California, and the California Fig Institute. R.B. and A.O.-B. were partially supported by CGIAR Research Program on Agriculture for Nutrition and Health (A4NH).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors receive no direct financial benefit from the manufacturing and marketing of any aflatoxin biocontrol products mentioned in this review article. The Aflasafe name is a Trademark of the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA). IITA used to manufacture and commercialize Aflasafe for use in Nigeria, Senegal, Burkina Faso, The Gambia, and Ghana. Manufacturing and distribution responsibilities have been licensed to the private or public sector. IITA charges a small licensing fee to manufacturers for use of the Aflasafe name and cost associated with technology transfer and technical backstopping. R.B. and A.O.-B. are employed by IITA. The rest of the authors declare that there are no commercial or financial relationships that could be interpreted as potential conflicts of interest.

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Figure 1. Number and relative percentage of mycotoxin alerts reported during the last five years (2014–2018) by the Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF, 2019).
Figure 1. Number and relative percentage of mycotoxin alerts reported during the last five years (2014–2018) by the Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF, 2019).
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Figure 2. Illustration of the process to select atoxigenic isolates of Aspergillus flavus to develop aflatoxin biocontrol products.
Figure 2. Illustration of the process to select atoxigenic isolates of Aspergillus flavus to develop aflatoxin biocontrol products.
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Figure 3. Relationship between aflatoxin reduction (%) as a result of application of atoxigenic Aspergillus flavus isolates to different commodities and the variation coefficient of aflatoxin contamination found in untreated fields of these crops.
Figure 3. Relationship between aflatoxin reduction (%) as a result of application of atoxigenic Aspergillus flavus isolates to different commodities and the variation coefficient of aflatoxin contamination found in untreated fields of these crops.
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Table 1. Toxigenic profile of aflatoxin-producing species within Aspergillus section Flavi. 1.
Table 1. Toxigenic profile of aflatoxin-producing species within Aspergillus section Flavi. 1.
SpeciesAflatoxin B1 & B2Aflatoxin G1 & G2AflatremCPA 23-Nit-Acid 3Tenuazonic Acid
A. aflatoxiformans++++--
A. arachidicola++----
A. austwickii++++--
A. cerealis++++--
A. flavus++ 4+++-
A. luteovirescens++---+
A. minisclerotigenes++++--
A. mottae++-+--
A. nomius++---+
A. novoparasiticus++----
A. parasiticus++----
A. pipericola++++--
A. pseudocaelatus++-+-+
A. pseudonomius++---+
A. pseudotamarii+--+-+
A. sergii++++--
A. togoensis+-----
A. transmontanensis++----
1 In each species, there are members that may not produce one or several toxins listed in the table. 2 Cyclopiazonic acid. 3 3-Nitropropionic acid. 4 Only a few isolates have been reported to produce G-type aflatoxins; data from [6,7,28].
Table 2. List of aflatoxin biocontrol products registered for commercial use 1.
Table 2. List of aflatoxin biocontrol products registered for commercial use 1.
ProductAtoxigenic Aspergillus flavus Isolate(s)Responsible Organization or EntityTarget CountryCrops for UseReference
Aspergillus flavus AF36 Prevail®AF36Arizona Cotton Research and Protection CouncilUSCotton, maize, pistachio, almond, and figs[5,48,49,51]
Afla-guard®NRRL21882Syngenta®USMaize and groundnut[91]
Aflasafe™Ka16127, La3279, La3304, Og0222IITA 3NigeriaMaize and groundnut[87]
Aflasafe KE01™C6-E, C8-F, E63-I, R7-HIITAKenyaMaize[45]
Aflasafe SN01M2-7, M21-11, Ms14-19, Ss19-14IITASenegal and The GambiaMaize and groundnut[45,88]
Aflasafe BF01M011-8, G018-2, M109-2, M110-7IITABurkina FasoMaize and groundnut[45]
Aflasafe GH01GHG079-4, GHG083-4, GHG321-2, GHM174-1IITAGhanaMaize, groundnut, and sorghum[47]
Aflasafe GH02GHM511-3, GHM109-4, GHM001-5, GHM287-10IITAGhanaMaize, groundnut, and sorghum[47]
Aflasafe TZ01 TMS199-3, TMH104-9, TGS364-2, TMH 30-8IITATanzaniaMaize and groundnutUnpublished registration document
Aflasafe TZ02TMS64-1, TGS55-6, TMS205-5, TMS137-3IITATanzaniaMaize and groundnutUnpublished registration document
Aflasafe MWMZ01 2GP5G-8, GP1H-12, MZM594-1, MZM029-7IITAMozambiqueMaize and groundnutUnpublished registration document
Aflasafe MWMZ01 2MW199-1, MW097-8, MW246-2, MW238-2 IITAMalawiMaize and groundnutUnpublished registration document
Aflasafe MZ02GP5G-8, MZG071-6, MZM028-5, MZM250-8 IITAMozambiqueMaize and groundnutUnpublished registration document
Aflasafe MW02MW258-6, MW332-10, MW248-11, MW204-7 IITAMalawiMaize and groundnutUnpublished registration document
Aflasafe ZM01 110MS-05, 38MS-03, 46MS-02, 03MS-10IITAZambiaMaize and groundnutUnpublished registration document
Aflasafe ZM0231MS-12, 12MS-10, 47MS-12, 64MS-03IITAZambiaMaize and groundnutUnpublished registration document
AF-X1®MUCL54911Pioneer® Int.ItalyMaize[52]
1 All products contain sorghum as the carrier grain, except Afla-guard®, which contains barley as the carrier [91]. 2 Aflasafe MWMZ01 is a regional product developed for both Malawi and Mozambique; one native atoxigenic isolate from each of four vegetative compatibility groups co-distributed in both Mozambique and Malawi was selected. 3 IITA, along with several partners, develops Aflasafe products for use in each nation; after registration, IITA licenses biocontrol manufacturing and commercialization responsibilities to private companies or the public sector [60].

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Moral, J.; Garcia-Lopez, M.T.; Camiletti, B.X.; Jaime, R.; Michailides, T.J.; Bandyopadhyay, R.; Ortega-Beltran, A. Present Status and Perspective on the Future Use of Aflatoxin Biocontrol Products. Agronomy 2020, 10, 491. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/agronomy10040491

AMA Style

Moral J, Garcia-Lopez MT, Camiletti BX, Jaime R, Michailides TJ, Bandyopadhyay R, Ortega-Beltran A. Present Status and Perspective on the Future Use of Aflatoxin Biocontrol Products. Agronomy. 2020; 10(4):491. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/agronomy10040491

Chicago/Turabian Style

Moral, Juan, Maria Teresa Garcia-Lopez, Boris X. Camiletti, Ramon Jaime, Themis J. Michailides, Ranajit Bandyopadhyay, and Alejandro Ortega-Beltran. 2020. "Present Status and Perspective on the Future Use of Aflatoxin Biocontrol Products" Agronomy 10, no. 4: 491. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/agronomy10040491

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