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1.
Plant Dis ; 2022 Dec 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36581604

RESUMEN

Dracaena trifasciata (Prain) Mabb. is a popular houseplant in the United States. In September 2021, two diseased samples from two Ohio homeowners were received by the Ornamental Pathology Laboratory at The Ohio State University. Each sample included one or two detached leaves displaying circular gray water-soaked lesions scattered throughout the lamina and blighted areas with concentric rings bearing brown to black acervuli. Lesions covered between 25 and 50% of the leaf surface. Isolations were made by excising small portions of leaf tissue from the margin of the lesions, surface-disinfesting in 10% bleach for 45 s, rinsing in sterile water, and plating on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Plates were incubated at 23°C for one week. Two representative isolates, one per sample (FPH2021-5 and -6), were obtained by transferring hyphal tips to fresh PDA plates. Mycelia of both isolates were aerial, cottony, grayish-white, producing spores in a gelatinous orange matrix, and appeared gray to olivaceous-gray on the plate underside. Conidia produced by both isolates were cylindrical, single-celled, hyaline, measuring 12.02 to 18.11 (15.51) × 5.03 to 7.29 (6.14) µm (FPH2021-5; n=50) and 15.58 to 20.90 (18.39) × 5.63 to 8.27 (7.05) µm (FPH2021-6; n=50). Appressoria were globose to subglobose, single-celled, dark brown to sepia, measuring 6.62 to 13.98 (8.97) × 5.05 to 6.58 (6.58) µm (FPH2021-5; n=50), and 6.54 to 11.32 (8.63) × 4.54 to 8.94 (7.09) µm (FPH2021-6; n=50). Genomic DNA (gDNA) samples were extracted from both isolates and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region was amplified using primers ITS1F/ITS4 (Gardes and Bruns, 1993; White et al. 1990). GenBank BLAST sequence analysis resulted in 99.83% (FPH2021-5; GenBank Acc. No. OP410918.1) and 100% (FPH2021-6; OP410917.1) identity with 100% query coverage to the type strain of Colletotrichum sansevieriae Miho Nakam. & Ohzono MAFF239721 or Sa-1-2 (NR_152313.1; Nakamura et al. 2006). Whole genome sequencing was conducted for FPH2021-6 and the assembly was deposited in GenBank (JAOQIF000000000.1). The glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and ß-tubulin (ß-tub) regions were either extracted from the genome of FPH2021-6 (OP414603.1 and OP414601.1, respectively) or amplified from FPH2021-5 gDNA using primers GDF/GDR (OP414604.1) and Bt-2b/T1 (OP414602.1), respectively (Templeton et al. 1992; Glass and Donaldson 1995; O'Donnell and Cigelnik 1997). A multilocus partitioned analysis (Chernomor et al. 2016) based on concatenated sequences of ITS, GAPDH, and ß-tub using ModelFinder (Kalyaanamoorthy et al. 2017) was performed to build a maximum likelihood tree (IQ-TREE v2.0.3; Nguyen et al. 2015), suggesting that these two isolates are phylogenetically closer to the type strain from Japan than to a previously reported isolate 1047 from Florida (Palmateer et al. 2012). To fulfill Koch's postulates, two parallel leaf sections from one 10-inch D. trifasciata 'Laurentii' plant maintained in a 1.3-liter container were selected. Three wounds were made in each section using a sterile syringe needle. A 10-µl drop of either a 1×106 conidia/ml suspension of isolate FPH2021-6 or sterile water was placed on each wound. The plant was covered with a plastic bag for two days post-inoculation (DPI) and maintained in a greenhouse at 25°C with a 12- h photoperiod. The experiment was conducted twice. Grayish water-soaked lesions, acervuli, and leaf blight were observed on the inoculated sections 3, 10, and 14 DPI, respectively, while no symptoms appeared on the sections treated with sterile water. C. sansevieriae was re-isolated from the lesions and confirmed to be identical to the original isolate based on ITS sequencing and morphological examinations. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of C. sansevieriae on D. trifasciata in Ohio and the first genome draft of an isolate from the United States. Availability of whole-genome sequence data is paramount for resolving species identification in this highly diverse fungal genus, and a powerful tool to conduct comparative genomic analyses in the future.

2.
PLoS One ; 18(12): e0289280, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38127903

RESUMEN

Trichoderma is a cosmopolitan genus with diverse lifestyles and nutritional modes, including mycotrophy, saprophytism, and endophytism. Previous research has reported greater metabolic gene repertoires in endophytic fungal species compared to closely-related non-endophytes. However, the extent of this ecological trend and its underlying mechanisms are unclear. Some endophytic fungi may also be mycotrophs and have one or more mycoparasitism mechanisms. Mycotrophic endophytes are prominent in certain genera like Trichoderma, therefore, the mechanisms that enable these fungi to colonize both living plants and fungi may be the result of expanded metabolic gene repertoires. Our objective was to determine what, if any, genomic features are overrepresented in endophytic fungi genomes in order to undercover the genomic underpinning of the fungal endophytic lifestyle. Here we compared metabolic gene cluster and mycoparasitism gene diversity across a dataset of thirty-eight Trichoderma genomes representing the full breadth of environmental Trichoderma's diverse lifestyles and nutritional modes. We generated four new Trichoderma endophyticum genomes to improve the sampling of endophytic isolates from this genus. As predicted, endophytic Trichoderma genomes contained, on average, more total biosynthetic and degradative gene clusters than non-endophytic isolates, suggesting that the ability to create/modify a diversity of metabolites potential is beneficial or necessary to the endophytic fungi. Still, once the phylogenetic signal was taken in consideration, no particular class of metabolic gene cluster was independently associated with the Trichoderma endophytic lifestyle. Several mycoparasitism genes, but no chitinase genes, were associated with endophytic Trichoderma genomes. Most genomic differences between Trichoderma lifestyles and nutritional modes are difficult to disentangle from phylogenetic divergences among species, suggesting that Trichoderma genomes maybe particularly well-equipped for lifestyle plasticity. We also consider the role of endophytism in diversifying secondary metabolism after identifying the horizontal transfer of the ergot alkaloid gene cluster to Trichoderma.


Asunto(s)
Endófitos , Trichoderma , Endófitos/genética , Trichoderma/genética , Filogenia , Plantas/genética , Familia de Multigenes/genética , Hongos/genética
3.
Microbiol Resour Announc ; 11(9): e0063122, 2022 Sep 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35993780

RESUMEN

Diaporthe ilicicola is a newly described fungal species that is associated with latent fruit rot in deciduous holly. This announcement provides a whole-genome assembly and annotation for this plant pathogen, which will inform research on its parasitism and identification of gene clusters involved in the production of bioactive metabolites.

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