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1.
Plant Dis ; 2024 Feb 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38393757

RESUMO

Acacia mangium has the characteristics of developed root system, nitrogen fixation and soil improvement, fast growth and high yield, and improvement of soil fertility. It is often used as a windbreak tree species in rubber plantations, a highway shade tree, for coastal and mountain restoration in Hainan . In October 2021, a stem rot disease with an incidence of 3% was found in Baisha city(19°22'18″N,109°16'58″E), Hainan Province, China. In the early stage of the disease, the crown showed chlorotic leaves, followed by defoliation. In later stages, whole tree dieback was observed. The basal tissue of the stem of the diseased tree had white rot, and black-brown basidiocarps were observed about 1 m away from the ground. The basidiocarps surface of fresh was disinfected with 75 % ethanol, the epidermal tissue was removed, and the inner tissue blocks were transferred to PDA medium. After culturing in dark at 28°C for 3 days, a colony with white aerial mycelium was isolated and designated: HNBSMZXS20211011001. The basidiocarp was dark brown, sessile, mostly one-year-old, and the cap is nearly semi-circular, wooden, slightly shiny, with a size of 14.7 to 18.1cm × 9.5 to 10.1 cm. The base is thick (5 to 6.5 cm) and the edge is thin (0.3 to 0.7 cm). The basidiospores are oval, 10.7 to 13.65µm × 6.7 to 9.06µm in size, with a double-layer wall. The outer wall is transparent and the inner wall is light yellow. The basidiospores contain 1~2 oil droplets. The morphological features are consistent with those of Amauroderma subresinosum (Murrill) Corner (Zhang et al., 2000). The basidiocarps and type strain cultures were stored as accessions in the Laboratory of Plant Pathogen Fungus Biology, Hainan University. For pathogenicity tests, sawdust culture medium was used (soft sawdust 82%, wheat bran 15%, glucose 2%, gypsum 1%, mixed with water in proportion, sterilized at 121°C for 40min). The mycelium plug from a fresh culture (d=5mm) was taken from the edge of the colony of type strain, and transferred to the sterilized sawdust medium. When mycelium has colonized the media, it was used to inoculate plants. Media without mycelium was used as a control. Naturally growing seedlings (three year old) of A.mangium were selected from the teaching nurseries of Hainan University (20°6'25''N,110°32'24''E). First, 75 % alcohol was sprayed on the stem of the base of A.mangium for surface disinfection. After the surface was dried, a slight wound (about 4×2cm) was made on the surface with a sterilized scalpel. A inoculated and control sawdust media rods were tightly attached to the wound, moistened with cotton balls soaked in sterile water, and then fixed with plastic wrap, and the outer layer was wrapped with newsprint. Inoculation and controls were replicated three times. Two months after inoculated, the stems of the plants inoculated with the isolated fungus grew white hyphae and showed white rot symptoms, and the leaves became chlorotic and defoliated with complete tree decline in six months, which was consistent with the original symptoms observed. By comparison, white callus had grown on the edge of the stem wounds of the control plants. The same fungus was re-isolated from the inoculated plants and confirmed as A.subresinosum based on the internal transcribed spacer (ITS), the ribosomal large subunit(LSU), and the translation elongation factor 1-α(EF1-α) gene sequence, the fungus was not isolated from control plants thus fulfilling Koch's postulates. The ITS region of r-DNA, the ribosomal large subunit(LSU), the translation elongation factor 1-α gene(EF1-α) were amplified using ITS1/ITS4(White et al. 1990), LR0R/LR5(Hu et al. 2021), EF1-983F/EF1-1567R(Buckley et al. 2005) primers, respectively. The sequences of ITS (OQ674500), LSU (OQ674502) and EF1-α gene (OQ883944) were submitted to GenBank. Through with BLAST, the identities of the ITS, LSU and EF1-α sequences to A.subresinosum (GenBank Accession no. ITS: LC176755; LSU: MK119903 and EF1-α: MK121572) was 99.82%; 99.15% and 99.82%, respectively, the identities were more than 99 %. It was reported that A.subresinosum could infect Casuarina equisetifolia and Areca catechu(Chen et al., 2016; Cheng. 2017; Wu et al., 2019). However, this is the first report of Amauroderma subresinosum causing stem rot of Acacia mangiumin Hainan, China. This report will facilitate field diagnosis and provide scientific reference for further research on the disease.

2.
Phytopathology ; 113(6): 1103-1114, 2023 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36576401

RESUMO

The genomic 5'-terminal regions of viruses in the family Potyviridae (potyvirids) encode two types of leader proteases: serine-protease (P1) and cysteine-protease (HCPro), which differ greatly in the arrangement and sequence composition among inter-genus viruses. Most potyvirids have the same tandemly arranged P1 and HCPro, whereas viruses in the genus Macluravirus encode a single distinct leader protease, a truncated version of HCPro with yet-unknown functions. We investigated the RNA silencing suppression (RSS) activity and its underpinning mechanism of the distinct HCPro from alpinia oxyphylla mosaic macluravirus (aHCPro). Sequence analysis revealed that macluraviral HCPros have obvious truncations in the N-terminal and middle regions when aligned to their counterparts in potyviruses (well-characterized viral suppressors of RNA silencing). Nearly all defined elements essential for the RSS activity of potyviral counterparts are not distinguished in macluraviral HCPros. Here, we demonstrated that aHCPro exhibits a similar anti-silencing activity with the potyviral counterpart. However, aHCPro fails to block both the local and systemic spreading of RNA silencing. In line, aHCPro interferes with the dsRNA synthesis, an upstream step in the RNA silencing pathway. Affinity-purification and NanoLC-MS/MS analysis revealed that aHCPro has no association with core components or their potential interactors involving in dsRNA synthesis from the protein layer. Instead, the ectopic expression of aHCPro significantly reduces the transcript abundance of RDR2, RDR6, SGS3, and SDE5. This study represents the first report on the anti-silencing function of Macluravirus-encoded HCPro and the underlying molecular mechanism.


Assuntos
Alpinia , Potyviridae , Potyvirus , Vírus , Potyviridae/genética , Interferência de RNA , RNA de Cadeia Dupla/genética , Alpinia/genética , Alpinia/metabolismo , Proteínas Virais/genética , Proteínas Virais/metabolismo , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem , Doenças das Plantas , Potyvirus/genética , Vírus/genética , Peptídeo Hidrolases/genética , Nicotiana
3.
Front Neurorobot ; 16: 865146, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35812781

RESUMO

This study is developed to explore the role of intelligent inspection robot in the protection and utilization of coal mine industrial heritage. Based on the actual situation of the coal mine, the underground planning protection scope is analyzed. Aiming at the problems of imperfect fire early warning detection technology, management mechanism, high labor cost and low work efficiency in underground protection, the intelligent inspection robot technology is proposed to realize safety tour, underground intelligent management and early warning of underground security, fire protection facilities construction, and intelligent early warning system. This paper analyzes the key technology of intelligent inspection robot in coal mine industrial heritage protection, introduces the composition, structure and implementation method, and proposes its construction path and method. Besides, the path planning, motion obstacle avoidance and sensing detection of the robot are studied. The research shows that the intelligent inspection robot has comprehensive functions and stable performance, and can realize the scientific, intelligent and refined management of industrial heritage protection, which provides a guiding basis for the intelligent protection of coal mine industrial heritage.

4.
Front Microbiol ; 12: 755156, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34733264

RESUMO

Previously, our group characterized two closely related viruses from Areca catechu, areca palm necrotic ringspot virus (ANRSV) and areca palm necrotic spindle-spot virus (ANSSV). These two viruses share a distinct genomic organization of leader proteases and represent the only two species of the newly established genus Arepavirus of the family Potyviridae. The biological features of the two viruses are largely unknown. In this study, we investigated the pathological properties, functional compatibility of viral elements, and interspecies interactions in the model plant, Nicotiana benthamiana. Using a newly obtained infectious clone of ANRSV, we showed that this virus induces more severe symptoms compared with ANSSV and that this is related to a rapid virus multiplication in planta. A series of hybrid viruses were constructed via the substitution of multiple elements in the ANRSV infectious clone with the counterparts of ANSSV. The replacement of either 5'-UTR-HCPro1-HCPro2 or CI effectively supported replication and systemic infection of ANRSV, whereas individual substitution of P3-7K, 9K-NIa, and NIb-CP-3'-UTR abolished viral infectivity. Finally, we demonstrated that ANRSV confers effective exclusion of ANSSV both in coinfection and super-infection assays. These results advance our understanding of fundamental aspects of these two distinct but closely related arepaviruses.

5.
Front Microbiol ; 12: 679102, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34276610

RESUMO

Soft rot pectobacteria are devastating plant pathogens with a global distribution and a broad host range. Pectobacterium aroidearum L6, previously isolated from leaves of Syngonium podophyllum, is a pectolytic bacterial pathogen that causes typical soft rot on S. podophyllum. There is a shortage for genome data of P. aroidearum, which seriously hinders research on classification and pathogenesis of Pectobacterium. We present here the complete genome sequence of P. aroidearum L6. The L6 strain carries a single 4,995,896-bp chromosome with 53.10% G + C content and harbors 4,306 predicted protein-coding genes. We estimated in silico DNA-DNA hybridization and average nucleotide identity values in combination with the whole-genome-based phylogeny from 19 Pectobacterium strains including P. aroidearum L6. The results showed that L6 and PC1 formed a population distinct from other populations of the Pectobacterium genus. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA and genome sequences showed a close evolutionary relationship among Pectobacterium species. Overall, evolutionary analysis showed that L6 was in the same branch with PC1. In comparison with 18 Pectobacterium spp. reference pathogens, strain L6 had 2,712 gene families, among which 1,632 gene families were identified as orthologous to those strains, as well as 1 putative unique gene family. We discovered 478 genes, 10.4% of the total of predicted genes, that were potentially related to pathogenesis using the Virulence Factors of Pathogenic Bacteria database. A total of 25 genes were related to toxins, 35 encoded plant cell-wall degrading enzymes, and 122 were involved in secretion systems. This study provides a foundation for a better understanding of the genomic structure of P. aroidearum and particularly offers information for the discovery of potential pathogenic factors and the development of more effective strategies against this pathogen.

6.
J Virol ; 95(1)2020 12 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33055249

RESUMO

Potyviridae is the largest family of plant-infecting RNA viruses and includes many agriculturally and economically important viral pathogens. The viruses in the family, known as potyvirids, possess single-stranded, positive-sense RNA genomes with polyprotein processing as a gene expression strategy. The N-terminal regions of potyvirid polyproteins vary greatly in sequence. Previously, we identified a novel virus species within the family, Areca palm necrotic spindle-spot virus (ANSSV), which was predicted to encode two cysteine proteases, HCPro1 and HCPro2, in tandem at the N-terminal region. Here, we present evidence showing self-cleavage activity of these two proteins and define their cis-cleavage sites. We demonstrate that HCPro2 is a viral suppressor of RNA silencing (VSR), and both the variable N-terminal and conserved C-terminal (protease domain) moieties have antisilencing activity. Intriguingly, the N-terminal region of HCPro1 also has RNA silencing suppression activity, which is, however, suppressed by its C-terminal protease domain, leading to the functional divergence of HCPro1 and HCPro2 in RNA silencing suppression. Moreover, the deletion of HCPro1 or HCPro2 in a newly created infectious clone abolishes viral infection, and the deletion mutants cannot be rescued by addition of corresponding counterparts of a potyvirus. Altogether, these data suggest that the two closely related leader proteases of ANSSV have evolved differential and essential functions to concertedly maintain viral viability.IMPORTANCE The Potyviridae represent the largest group of known plant RNA viruses and account for more than half of the viral crop damage worldwide. The leader proteases of viruses within the family vary greatly in size and arrangement and play key roles during the infection. Here, we experimentally demonstrate the presence of a distinct pattern of leader proteases, HCPro1 and HCPro2 in tandem, in a newly identified member within the family. Moreover, HCPro1 and HCPro2, which are closely related and typically characterized with a short size, have evolved contrasting RNA silencing suppression activity and seem to function in a coordinated manner to maintain viral infectivity. Altogether, the new knowledge fills a missing piece in the evolutionary relationship history of potyvirids and improves our understanding of the diversification of potyvirid genomes.


Assuntos
Cisteína Proteases/metabolismo , Potyviridae/enzimologia , Interferência de RNA , Proteínas Virais/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Cisteína Proteases/genética , Genes Supressores , Genoma Viral , Viabilidade Microbiana , Mutação , Filogenia , Doenças das Plantas/virologia , Poliproteínas , Potyviridae/genética , Domínios Proteicos , RNA Viral/genética , Proteínas Virais/genética
7.
Phytopathology ; 109(5): 887-894, 2019 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30133353

RESUMO

Areca palm (Areca catechu), one of the two most important commercial crops in Hainan, China, has been severely damaged by a variety of pathogens and insects. Here, we report a new disease, tentatively referred to as areca palm necrotic ringspot disease (ANRSD), which is highly epidemic in the main growing regions in Hainan. Transmission electron microscopy observation and small RNA deep sequencing revealed the existence of a viral agent of the family Potyviridae in a diseased areca palm plant (XC1). The virus was tentatively named areca palm necrotic ringspot virus (ANRSV). Subsequently, the positive-sense single-stranded genome of ANRSV isolate XC1 was completely determined. The genome annotation revealed the existence of two cysteine proteinases in tandem (HC-Pro1 and HC-Pro2) in the genomic 5' terminus of ANRSV. Sequence comparison and phylogenetic analysis suggested the taxonomic classification of ANRSV into the recently proposed genus Arepavirus in the family Potyviridae. Given the close relationship of ANRSV with another newly reported arepavirus (areca palm necrotic spindle-spot virus), the exact taxonomic status of ANRSV needs to be further investigated. In this study, a reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction assay for ANRSV-specific detection was developed and a close association between ANRSV and ANRSD was found.


Assuntos
Areca/virologia , Filogenia , Doenças das Plantas/virologia , Potyviridae/patogenicidade , China , Genoma Viral , Potyviridae/classificação , RNA Viral
9.
Arch Virol ; 163(12): 3471-3475, 2018 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30136252

RESUMO

A novel virus, tentatively named "areca palm necrotic spindle-spot virus" (ANSSV), was identified in Areca catechu L. in Hainan, China, and its complete genomic sequence was determined. Its positive-sense single-stranded RNA genome is comprised of 9,437 nucleotides (nt), excluding the poly (A) tail, and contains one large open reading frame encoding a polyprotein of 3,019 amino acids (aa). A Blastp search showed that the polyprotein of ANSSV shared a maximum of 31%-32% aa sequence identity (with 86%-95% coverage) with all seven known macluraviruses. Nucleotide sequence comparison of the ORF of ANSSV to those of macluraviruses revealed identities ranging from 41.0% to 44.6%, which is less than the inter-genus identity values for the family Potyviridae. Phylogenetic analysis based on either the aa or nt sequence of the polyprotein did not cluster ANSSV into any established or unassigned genus of the family Potyviridae. Therefore, we suggest that ANSSV is the first member of a previously unrecognized genus of the family Potyviridae.


Assuntos
Areca/virologia , Genoma Viral , Doenças das Plantas/virologia , Potyviridae/genética , Potyviridae/isolamento & purificação , Sequência de Bases , China , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Fases de Leitura Aberta , Filogenia , Potyviridae/classificação , Análise de Sequência de DNA
10.
Arch Virol ; 163(9): 2579-2582, 2018 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29786122

RESUMO

A macluravirus, tentatively named alpinia oxyphylla mosaic virus (AloMV), was identified in Alpinia oxyphylla, and its complete genomic sequence determined. The positively single-stranded RNA genome is comprised of 8213 nucleotides excluding the poly (A) tail, and contains one large open reading frame encoding a polyprotein of 2,626 amino acids. Blastp search showed that the polyprotein of AloMV shared 48%~68% aa sequence identities with other reported macluraviruses. Phylogenetic analysis based on the nucleotide sequence of the polyprotein showed that AloMV, together with all other macluraviruses, clustered into the same group most closely related to cardamom mosaic virus, sharing 66.3% nt and 68% aa sequence identities, respectively. These data above suggest that AloMV represents an isolate of a putative new member within the genus Macluravirus.


Assuntos
Alpinia/virologia , Genoma Viral , Doenças das Plantas/virologia , Potyviridae/genética , RNA Viral/genética , Proteínas Virais/genética , Sequência de Bases , Mapeamento Cromossômico , Tamanho do Genoma , Fases de Leitura Aberta , Filogenia , Potyviridae/classificação , Potyviridae/isolamento & purificação , Homologia de Sequência do Ácido Nucleico , Sequenciamento Completo do Genoma
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