Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteurs principaux: Neves, Ana B, Gonçalves, Tiago M, Alves, Artur, Gonçalves, Micael F M
Format: Artículo científico
Langue:en
Publié: Microorganisms 2026
Accès en ligne:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42197405/
Tags: Ajouter un tag
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
_version_ 1868266044079996928
author Neves, Ana B
Gonçalves, Tiago M
Alves, Artur
Gonçalves, Micael F M
author_facet Neves, Ana B
Gonçalves, Tiago M
Alves, Artur
Gonçalves, Micael F M
Neves, Ana B
Gonçalves, Tiago M
Alves, Artur
Gonçalves, Micael F M
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Soil Reservoirs of Antifungal-Resistant Fungi: Implications for Plant Disease Management with a Focus on . Neves, Ana B Gonçalves, Tiago M Alves, Artur Gonçalves, Micael F M Crop losses driven by fungal pathogens remain a major constraint to global food production, reinforcing agriculture's dependence on fungicide-based disease control. Soil acts as a long-term reservoir and key hotspot for the evolution and persistence of antifungal-resistant . The intensive, prolonged use of overlapping single-site fungicides in agriculture strongly selects for both intrinsic and acquired resistance in soilborne populations, contributing to major crop losses, food insecurity, and One Health concerns. This review synthesizes current knowledge on (i) target-site (CYP51, β-tubulin, cytochrome b, SDH, myosin-5) and non-target-site (ABC/MFS efflux, multidrug resistance, epigenetic regulation) resistance mechanisms across the genus ; (ii) the influence of management practices and fungicide characteristics and behaviour in soil in reshaping microbial communities and selecting for resistant ; (iii) the consequences for plant disease management and the limitations of practices like cultural and biological control; and (iv) innovative strategies for plant disease management, as well as the monitoring and detection of antifungal resistance in soils. These aspects show that soil reservoirs of antifungal-resistant are compromising fungicide-based control and increasing risks across sectors, highlighting the urgent need for sustainable, multi-layered, integrated pest management strategies combined with robust, molecularly informed resistance monitoring.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_42197405
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2026
publisher Microorganisms
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Soil Reservoirs of Antifungal-Resistant Fungi: Implications for Plant Disease Management with a Focus on .
Neves, Ana B
Gonçalves, Tiago M
Alves, Artur
Gonçalves, Micael F M
Soil Reservoirs of Antifungal-Resistant Fungi: Implications for Plant Disease Management with a Focus on . Neves, Ana B Gonçalves, Tiago M Alves, Artur Gonçalves, Micael F M Crop losses driven by fungal pathogens remain a major constraint to global food production, reinforcing agriculture's dependence on fungicide-based disease control. Soil acts as a long-term reservoir and key hotspot for the evolution and persistence of antifungal-resistant . The intensive, prolonged use of overlapping single-site fungicides in agriculture strongly selects for both intrinsic and acquired resistance in soilborne populations, contributing to major crop losses, food insecurity, and One Health concerns. This review synthesizes current knowledge on (i) target-site (CYP51, β-tubulin, cytochrome b, SDH, myosin-5) and non-target-site (ABC/MFS efflux, multidrug resistance, epigenetic regulation) resistance mechanisms across the genus ; (ii) the influence of management practices and fungicide characteristics and behaviour in soil in reshaping microbial communities and selecting for resistant ; (iii) the consequences for plant disease management and the limitations of practices like cultural and biological control; and (iv) innovative strategies for plant disease management, as well as the monitoring and detection of antifungal resistance in soils. These aspects show that soil reservoirs of antifungal-resistant are compromising fungicide-based control and increasing risks across sectors, highlighting the urgent need for sustainable, multi-layered, integrated pest management strategies combined with robust, molecularly informed resistance monitoring.
title Soil Reservoirs of Antifungal-Resistant Fungi: Implications for Plant Disease Management with a Focus on .
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42197405/