RESUMEN
Banana is one of the main fruit crops worldwide. In October 2020, peduncles with rot were observed on bananas (Musa sp. ABB, Pisang Awak subgroup) at a about 1600 square meter commercial banana plantation in Dayu Town (23.17° N, 109.80° E), Guigang, Guangxi, China. The incidence of the disease was about 40%. The interior of the peduncle initially appeared reddish-brown and gradually turned black, and the peduncle eventually rotted. Two whole diseased bunches diseased samples were collected from banana plantations. Small pieces of tissues from the peduncle at the junction of disease and health were surface-disinfected in 75% ethanol for 10 s, 2% NaClO for 1 min, and rinsed three times in sterile water, then placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) for incubation at 25°C. Forty-nine fungal isolates with similar morphology were recovered from diseased tissues, with 82% isolation frequency. Six isolates (GG3-1, GG3-2, GG3-3, GG4-1, GG4-2 and GG4-3) were selected for further study. Genomic DNAs of these isolates were extracted from 7-day-old mycelia. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS), translation elongation factor (TEF1), calmodulin (CAM), and partial RNA polymerase second largest subunit (RPB2) of six representative isolates were amplified and sequenced (O'Donnell et al. 2000, 2010; White et al. 1990). Sequences were deposited in GenBank. (accessions PP087392-PP087397 for ITS; PP102792-PP102797 for TEF1; PP102798-PP102803 for CAM; PP102804-P102809 for RPB2). A phylogenetic tree based on concatenated sequences of all markers using the Maximum Likelihood algorithm (Xia et al. 2019; Schroers et al. 2016). Based on phylogenetic analyses, GG3-1, -2 and -3 were identified as F. petroliphilum with 100% bootstrap support, and GG4-1, -2 and -3 were tightly clustered with F. pernambucanum with 95% bootstrap support. The two representative isolates GG3-2 and GG4-2 were selected for morphology and pathogenicity observation. Colonies of GG3-2 were light yellow and flat mycelium. They produced falciform macroconidia of 46.1 ± 5.3 × 2.6 ± 0.4 µm with 3 to 5 septates, and hyaline, ovoid microconidia of 7.6 ± 0.9 × 4.0 ± 0.6 µm with 0 septate (Brown et al. 2022). Mycelia were whitish to yellowish aerial mycelium for GG4-2. Their macroconidia were falcate of 31.6 ± 3.0 × 4.3 ± 0.3 µm with curved apical cells, foot-shaped basal cells, and 3 to 5 septates. The microconidia were fusoid of 8.9 ± 1.0 × 2.7 ± 0.3 µm with 0 to 1 septate (Santos et al. 2019). For pathogenicity tests, the ends of the banana peduncles were cut off. Needle punctures were made on the ethanol-treated peduncle pieces, followed by inoculation with 20 µL of conidial suspension (106 spores/ml) of each of the two isolates with three replications each. Sterilized water was used as a control. Peduncle pieces were placed in a humid box and incubated at 28ºC. After 7 days, reddish-brown to black lesions were observed on all inoculated peduncle pieces, while no symptoms were observed on the control pieces. The fungus was isolated from the inoculated peduncle pieces and found to match the morphological characteristics and marker sequences of the original isolates, confirming Koch's postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of peduncle rot on banana caused by F. petroliphilum and F. pernambucanum in China. This study will provide valuable information on causal pathogens of this disease which can contribute to improving prevention and disease management strategies for growers.
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Alternaria species are commonly found as saprophytes, endophytes and plant pathogens. During a survey of small-spored Alternaria in China, two new species were discovered from Cucurbitaceae plants collected in Hubei and Sichuan provinces. This study identified two new species of Alternaria using seven genes (ITS, GAPDH, TEF1, RPB2, Alt a 1, EndoPG, and OPA10-2) for phylogenetic analyses and morphological characteristics. The two new species A.jingzhouensis and A.momordicae were described and illustrated. Alternariajingzhouensis sp. nov., associated with Citrulluslanatus, is characterized by producing muriform, ellipsoidal, flask-shaped, rostrate, and beaked conidia. It differs from A.koreana, A.ovoidea, and A.baoshanensis by bearing conidia in a simple conidiogenous locus with occasionally longer beaks in a chain, and from A.momordicae sp. nov. by having shorter beaks. Alternariamomordicae sp. nov. from Momordicacharantia was distinct from A.koreana, A.ovoidea, and A.baoshanensis by producing muriform, long ellipsoid or ovoid to obclavate, sometimes inverted club-shaped conidia on a single conidiogenous locus with a wider body and longer beak in a chain, and distinct from A.jingzhouensis sp. nov. by a longer beak conidia. These two species were clearly distinguished from other species in the section Alternaria based on DNA based phylogeny and morphological characteristics. The morphological features were discussed and compared to relevant species in the present paper.
RESUMEN
As an evergreen shrub, Euonymus japonicus plays a crucial role in urban landscape construction, and its growth is affected by severe foliar anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum spp. However, the biodiversity of Colletotrichum species associated with anthracnose on E. japonicus remains undetermined. This study involved a two-year collection of E. japonicus leaf samples with typical anthracnose symptoms from 9 districts in Beijing, China. A total of 194 Colletotrichum isolates were obtained, and eight Colletotrichum species were subsequently identified using morphological characteristics and molecular identification with the ACT, GADPH, CHS, TUB2, and CAL genes, as well as the rDNA-ITS region. These species included Colletotrichum aenigma, C. fructicola, C. gloeosporioides, C. grossum, C. hebeiense, C. karstii, C. siamense, and C. theobromicola with C. siamense being the most prevalent (57%), followed by C. aenigma and C. theobromicola. Furthermore, C. fructicola, C. grossum and C. hebeiense are reported for the first time as causal agents of anthracnose on E. japonicus worldwide, and C. karstii is newly reported to be associated with E. japonicus anthracnose in China. Pathogenicity tests revealed that all tested isolates exhibited pathogenicity in the presence of wounds, emphasizing the need to avoid artificial or mechanical wounds to prevent infection in E. japonicus management. The EC50 values of five fungicides, namely difenoconazole, flusilazole, tebuconazole, hexaconazole, and prochloraz, were found to be less than 10 mg/L, indicating their strong potential for application. Notably, the EC50 of prochloraz was less than 0.05 mg/L for C. theobromicola. These findings offer valuable insights for the management of anthracnose on E. japonicus.
RESUMEN
Cavendish banana (Musa spp. AAA group) is one of the main fruit crops worldwide. It is widely planted in Guangdong, Hainan, Guangxi, Fujian and Yunnan provinces in southern China. In November 2020, banana fruits with anthracnose symptoms were collected from Dayu Town (N 23.17°, E 109.80°), Guigang City, and Chengjun Town (N 22.60°, E 110.00°), Yulin City, Guangxi Province, China, where the disease was found on about 70% of the banana plants, and on individual fruit, up to 10% of the surface was covered with symptoms. The symptoms initially began with rust-colored spots on the surface of the immature fruit, which gradually became sunken and cracked as the disease progressed. Small tissues (5×5 mm) from the pericarp at the junction of disease and health were surface-disinfected in 75% ethanol for 10 s, 2% sodium hypochlorite (NaClO) for 1 min, and washed three times in sterile water. Tissue pieces were placed on potato dextrose ager (PDA) and incubated at 25°C. Fifty-nine morphologically similar colonies were obtained after 5 days of incubation, with 100% isolation frequency. Of 59 isolates, GG1-3 isolated from Guigang City and YL4-2 isolated from Yulin City were selected as representative strains for intensive study. Mycelia were off-white for both isolates and conidia obtained from PDA were cylindrical, unicellular, hyaline and obtuse ends, with sizes of 11.5 ± 1.8×3.9 ± 0.8 µm (n=60) and 11.5 ± 1.6×4.1 ± 0.6 µm (n=60) for GG1-3 and YL4-2, respectively (Prihastuti et al. 2009). Genomic DNA was extracted from 7-day-old aerial mycelia using a DNAsecure Plant Kit (Tiangen Biotech, China). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS), the intergenic region of apn2 and MAT1-2-1 (ApMAT) and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) were amplified and sequenced (White et al. 1990; Silva et al.2012; Templeton et al. 1992). Sequences were deposited in GenBank (ITS, OR596961 to OR596962; GAPDH, OR661771 to OR661772; APMAT, OR661773 to OR661774) and showed 100% identities with the corresponding type strains sequences of C. fructicola. Phylogenetic tree was constructed with software raxmlGUI v.2.0.0 based on sequences of multiple loci (ITS, GAPDH and ApMAT) and Maximum Likelihood method. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the two isolates and C. fructicola were clustered in the same clade, with 94% bootstrap support. According to morphology and phylogenetic analysis, the two isolates GG1-3 and YL4-2 were identified as C. fructicola. For pathogenicity tests, healthy fruits were surface sterilized with 75% ethanol followed by a wash with sterilized water. Five adjacent needle punctures in a 5-mm-diameter circle were made with a sterilized needle on healthy fruits, followed by inoculation with 20 µL of conidial suspension (106 spores/ml), and sterilized water was used as controls. All banana fruit were incubated in a humid chamber at 28°C. After 4 days, all inoculated fruits showed visible symptoms and had rust-colored spots on the margins, while control banana fruits remained symptomless. The fungus was isolated from the inoculated fruit and the isolates were found to match the morphological and molecular characteristics of the original isolates, confirming Koch's hypothesis. To our knowledge, this is the first report of fruit anthracnose on Cavendish bananas caused by C. fructicola in China. This study will provide valuable information for prevention and management of anthracnose on banana fruit.
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To evaluate the potential of a bacterial strain as a fungal disease control agent and plant growth promoter, its inhibitory effects on phytopathogens such as Bipolaris sorokiniana, Botrytis cinerea, Colletotrichum capsici, Fusarium graminearum, F. oxysporum, Neocosmospora rubicola, Rhizoctonia solani, and Verticillium dahliae were investigated. The results showed that the inhibitory rates in dual-culture and sterile filtrate assays against these eight phytopathogens ranged from 57% to 83% and from 36% to 92%. The strain was identified as Bacillus velezensis based on morphological and physiological characterization as well as phylogenetic analyses of 16S rRNA and the gyrase subunit A protein (gyrA) regions. The results demonstrated that B. velezensis was able to produce fungal cell-wall-degrading enzymes, namely, protease, cellulase, and ß-1,3-glucanase, and the growth-promotion substances indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and siderophore. Furthermore, B. velezensis BV01 had significant control effects on wheat root rot and pepper Fusarium wilt in a greenhouse. Potted growth-promotion experiments displayed that BV01 significantly increased the height, stem diameter, and aboveground fresh and dry weights of wheat and pepper. The results imply that B. velezensis BV01, a broad-spectrum biocontrol bacterium, is worth further investigation regarding its practical applications in agriculture.
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Tidal flats have been reported to contain many microorganisms and play a critical role in maintaining biodiversity. In surveys of filamentous fungi from tidal flat sediments in China, seven new species of Eurotiales were discovered and described. Morphological characteristics and DNA sequence analyses of combined datasets of the BenA, CaM, and RPB2 regions support their placements and recognition as new species. Aspergillus liaoningensis sp. nov. and A. plumeriae sp. nov. belong to sections Candidi and Flavipedes of subgenus Circumdati, and A. subinflatus sp. nov. is a member of section Cremei of subgenus Cremei. Penicillium danzhouense sp. nov., P. tenue sp. nov., and P. zhanjiangense sp. nov. are attributed to sections Exilicaulis and Lanata-Divaricata of subgenus Aspergilloides. Talaromyces virens sp. nov. is in section Talaromyces. Detailed descriptions and illustrations of these novel taxa are provided. Their differences from close relatives were compared and discussed.
RESUMEN
Tobacco is one of the vital economic crops in China. Nevertheless, tobacco diseases cause substantial economic losses each year. Tobacco target spot is a fungal disease which commonly found on the leaves. While both sexual and asexual reproduction can occur, asexual reproduction is much more common in tobacco. In June 2022, target spot was found on tobacco leaf samples from Yibin, Sichuan Province and Meitan, Guizhou Province, China. The typical symptoms were light brown tissue with concentric ring marks, and the necrotic part of the disease spot was fragile and forming perforation after falling off. The diseased tissue in the sample was cut off and sterilized in 75% ethanol for 1 min, and rinsed three times in sterilized distilled water. Finally, the tissues were placed on potato glucose agar (PDA) medium with kanamycin (0.1 mg/mL). After incubation at 28 °C in darkness for 3 days,the culture of the isolate grew in the form of radial mycelium on PDA dishes, the mycelium was white initially, turned brown generally at the later stage, and finally thickened and separated with the growth of the culture. Nine pathogenic strains were isolated, including four isolates from Yibin and five from Meitan. They were all used for pathogen identification. Genomic DNA of each isolate was extracted using the CATB method, and PCR analysis was performed with primers specifically designed to detect individual fusion groups or fusion subgroups of solani: AG-1 IA, IB, and IC; AG-3 PT; AG-4 HG-I, HG-II and HG-III; AGs-5-6 and P-21-22. Among the 11 specific primer pairs, only AG-5-specific primer amplified the fungal DNA, indicating that the nine isolates tested all belonged to the R. solani AG-5 fusion group. BLASTn search was performed on the gene sequences obtained from these strains and they deposited in GenBank under accession no. OP647851-OP647859. These gene sequences were aligned with the voucher specimen R. solani AG-5, with more than 99% similarity . The nine isolates were then tested for mycelial anastomosis reactions using the R. solani AG-5 standard strain following the method described by Ogoshi (1987). A decrease in the diameter of the mycelia at the anastomosis site and death of adjacent cells were observed, indicating their anastomosis response. Therefore, these nine strains were identified as R. solani AG-5 based on morphological and genetic analysis. Subsequently, one pathogenic strain from Meitan and another one from Yibin were selected for pathogenicity verification. Mycelial PDA blocks (6 mm in diameter) of the two isolates were inoculated on healthy tobacco plants, while leaves containing only PDA blocks were used as controls. A total of 6 replicates were conducted. After inoculation, they were incubated at 85% relative humidity and 15 to 25 °C. Koch's hypothesis was confirmed by reisolating pathogens from diseased leaves 5 days after inoculation. Typical symptoms were observed on tobacco plants inoculated with the pathogen strains but not on control tobacco plants. To the best of our knowledge, tobacco target spot has been reported caused by R. solani AG-3, AG-6 and AG-2.1 groups in the field in China and in Argentina. Up until now, this is the first report of R. solani AG-5 causing tobacco target spot on tobacco in the field in China. It was also found to be highly virulent to chickpea in Turkey. Due to serious damages caused by this disease in the last five years in China, more attention should be paid in disease control measures to avoid economic losses. In addition, it also provides some theoretical help for the damage caused by this pathogen on other hosts and helps people to better understand Rhizoctonia solani AG-5.
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Persimmon (Diospyros kaki Thunb.) is widely cultivated in China. On October 15, 2019, about 10% of persimmon fruits showed fruit rot in the orchards of Guilin, Guangxi, China (24°45' N, 110°24' E), which could cause more than 15% of yield losses. The initial symptoms of fruit rot exhibited irregular brown to black spots (range from 2 to 4 cm in diameter), the areas surrounding the blackened spots would be soft and rotten, and three diseased fruit samples were collected from three orchards, respectively. Tissues (5×5 mm) were cut from infected margins, surface-disinfected in 75% ethanol for 10 s, 2% NaClO for 2 min, rinsed three times in sterilized distilled water, and incubated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25°C under 12/12 h light/darkness for a week. Forty-one tissues yielded morphologically similar cultures, and three representative isolates LPG1-1, LPG1-2, and YSG-1 were selected from three samples for further study, respectively. Their colonies showed wavy edges, white surfaces, and dense aerial hyphae on PDA after two weeks. Conidia were fusiform, straight to slightly curved, and 4-septate; basal cells were conical, hyaline, thin, and verruculose with two or three long and hyaline apical appendages and one short apical appendage; three median cells of LPG1-1 with length 14.06 to 17.69 µm (n=100), and LPG1-2 with length 14.03 to 17.61 µm (n=100) were dark brown to olivaceous, while three median cells of YSG-1 with length 12.54 to 15.58 µm (n=100) were dark brown. The conidial sizes of LPG1-1, LPG1-2, and YSG-1 were 17.41 to 27.68 × 4.63 to 8.55 µm (n=100), 18.06 to 27.41 × 4.33 to 8.21 µm (n=100), and 16.58 to 27.73 × 4.99 to 8.39 µm (n=100), respectively. The morphological characteristics were consistent with Neopestalotiopsis spp. (Maharachchikumbura et al. 2012; Maharachchikumbura et al. 2014). Primer pairs ITS4/ITS5, BT2a/BT2b, and EF1-526F/EF-1567R were used to amplify internal transcribed spacer (ITS), beta-tubulin (TUB2), and translation elongation factor 1 alpha (TEF1-α), respectively (Shu et al., 2020). All DNA fragments were sequenced by Sangon Biotech Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China). Sequences have been deposited in GenBank (ITS: OM349120 to OM349122, TUB2: OM688188 to OM688190, TEF1-α: OM688191 to OM688193). Based on BLASTn analysis of ITS, TUB2, and TEF1-α sequences, the LPG1-1 and LPG1-2 showed over 99% similarity to N. saprophytica, and YSG-1 showed over 99% similarity to N. ellipsospora. Phylogenetic analysis of the three isolates was performed with MEGA10 (version 10.0) based on sequences of ITS, TUB2, and TEF1-α using maximum parsimony analysis. The results revealed that LPG1-1 and LPG1-2 were clustered with N. saprophytica, and YSG-1 was clustered with N. ellipsospora. Pathogenicity tests of three isolates were conducted on 72 healthy persimmon fruits with and without wounds, and 9 fruits are for each treatment. The wound was made by a sterilized needle. Fruits were pre-processed with 75% ethanol for 10 s, 1% NaClO for 2 min and rinsed three times in sterile water. Conidial suspensions (10 µL, 106 conidia/mL in 0.1% sterile Tween 20) were inoculated on each site (4 sites/fruit). Control group was treated with 0.1% sterile Tween 20. All inoculated sites were covered with wet cotton. The inoculated fruits were placed in a plastic box to maintain humidity at 28â. After 5 days, all wounded fruits showed fruit rot, whereas unwounded and control fruits remained asymptomatic, there were significant differences (P<0.05) in aggressiveness between N. saprophytica (average lesion diameter 13.1 mm) and N. ellipsospora (average lesion diameter 14.9 mm). Koch's postulates were fulfilled by re-isolating the causal agents from inoculated fruits. N. ellipsospora was previously reported as an endophyte in D. montana in southern India (Reddy et al. 2016). N. saprophytica could cause leaf spot of Erythropalum scandens and Magnolia sp., and fruit rot of Litsea rotundifolia in China and leaf spot of Elaeis guineensis in Malaysia (Yang et al. 2021, Ismail et al. 2017). To our knowledge, this is the first report of N. ellipsospora and N. saprophytica causing fruit rot on persimmon in the world. The results will provide a foundation for controlling fruit rot caused by pestalotioid fungi on persimmon.
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In recent years, STROBY (50% Kresoxim-methyl) has been widely used to control tobacco brown spot in Guizhou Province, China. As a broad-spectrum fungicide, STROBY targets not only phytopathogens, but also affects many other microorganisms including those pathogenic, beneficial, or neutral to the plant hosts. To understand the effects of STROBY on the phyllosphere microbial communities of tobacco leaves during the development of tobacco brown spot, the fungal and bacterial communities of symptomatic and asymptomatic leaves at four time points, before spraying (August 29) and after spraying (September 3, 8, and 13), were investigated using the Illumina high-throughput sequencing. The results showed that STROBY had significant effects on the phyllosphere microbial communities of tobacco leaves. Microbial communities in asymptomatic leaves were more greatly affected than their counterparts in symptomatic leaves, and fungal communities were more sensitive than bacterial communities. Throughout the experiment, the most common genera in symptomatic leaves were Alternaria, Pseudomonas, Pantoea, and Sphingomonas, and in asymptomatic leaves, these were Golubevia and Pantoea. After spraying, the alpha diversity of fungal communities increased in symptomatic leaves and decreased in asymptomatic leaves, while the alpha diversity of bacteria increased in both types of leaves. Beta diversity showed that in asymptomatic leaves, the fungal communities in the first stage was significantly different from the remaining three stages. In contrast, the fungal communities in symptomatic leaves and the bacterial communities in all leaves did not fluctuate significantly during the four stages. Before spraying (August 29), the dominant functions of the fungal community were animal pathogen, endophyte, plant pathogen, and wood saprotroph. Whereas after spraying (September 3, 8, and 13), the proportion of the above fungal functions decreased and the unassigned functions increased, especially in asymptomatic leaves. This study describes the effects of STROBY application and tobacco brown spot presence in shaping the leaf phyllosphere microbial communities, and provides insights into the microbial community effects on tobacco leaves of a strobilurin fungicide.
RESUMEN
Alternaria is a ubiquitous fungal genus including saprobic, endophytic, and pathogenic species associated with a wide variety of substrates. It has been separated into 29 sections and seven monotypic lineages based on molecular and morphological data. Alternaria sect. Porri is the largest section, containing the majority of large-spored Alternaria species, most of which are important plant pathogens. Since 2015, of the investigations for large-spored Alternaria species in China, 13 species were found associated with Compositae plants based on morphological comparisons and phylogenetic analyses. There were eight known species and five new species (A. anhuiensis sp. nov., A. coreopsidis sp. nov., A. nanningensis sp. nov., A. neimengguensis sp. nov., and A. sulphureus sp. nov.) distributed in the four sections of Helianthiinficientes, Porri, Sonchi, and Teretispora, and one monotypic lineage (A. argyranthemi). The multi-locus sequence analyses encompassing the internal transcribed spacer region of rDNA (ITS), glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), Alternaria major allergen gene (Alt a 1), translation elongation factor 1-alpha (TEF1), and RNA polymerase second largest subunit (RPB2), revealed that the new species fell into sect. Porri. Morphologically, the new species were illustrated and compared with other relevant large-spored Alternaria species in the study. Furthermore, A. calendulae, A. leucanthemi, and A. tagetica were firstly detected in Brachyactis ciliate, Carthamus tinctorius, and Calendula officinalis in China, respectively.
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In the tobacco phyllosphere, some of the microbes may have detrimental effects on plant health, while many may be neutral or even beneficial. Some cannot be cultivated, so culture-independent methods are needed to explore microbial diversity. In this study, both metagenetic analysis and traditional culture-dependent methods were used on asymptomatic healthy leaves and symptomatic diseased leaves of tobacco plants. In the culture-independent analysis, asymptomatic leaves had higher microbial diversity and richness than symptomatic leaves. Both asymptomatic and symptomatic leaves contained several potentially pathogenic bacterial and fungal genera. The putative bacterial pathogens, such as species of Pseudomonas, Pantoea, or Ralstonia, and putative fungal pathogens, such as species of Phoma, Cladosporium, Alternaria, Fusarium, Corynespora, and Epicoccum, had a higher relative abundance in symptomatic leaves than asymptomatic leaves. FUNGuild analysis indicated that the foliar fungal community also included endophytes, saprotrophs, epiphytes, parasites, and endosymbionts. PICRUSt analysis showed that the dominant functions of the bacterial community in a symptomatic leaf were cellular processes and environmental information processing. In the other five foliar samples, the dominant functions of the bacterial community were genetic information processing, metabolism, and organismal systems. In the traditional culture-dependent method, 47 fungal strains were isolated from 60 symptomatic tobacco leaf fragments bearing leaf spots. Among them, 21 strains of Colletotrichum (29%), Xylariaceae (14%), Corynespora (14%), Pestalotiopsis (10%), Alternaria (10%), Epicoccum (10%), Byssosphaeria (5%), Phoma (5%), and Diaporthe (5%) all fulfilled Koch's postulates and were found to cause disease on detached tobacco leaves in artificial inoculation tests. Symptoms on detached leaves caused by three strains of Corynespora cassiicola in artificial inoculation tests were similar to the original disease symptoms in the tobacco field. This study showed that the combined application of culture-dependent and independent methods could give comprehensive insights into microbial composition that each method alone did not reveal.
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Litchi (Litchi chinensis Sonn.), a native fruit tree from southern China, has been planted in many subtropical and tropical countries for its fruit which are considered delicious and of medicinal value (Anderson et al. 2013). Anthracnose, one of the most important diseases on litchi, can cause flower drop, fruit drop, and fruit rot. Infected leaves form dark brown spots which turn to reddish brown with gray-white edges. Infected fruits formed dark brown spots which developed eventually to entire black rotted fruits. On both tissues, small dots of acervuli appeared with high humidity (Lai et al. 2004). On 20 April 2019, two leaf spots samples of litchi from different plants were collected from a 2 ha litchi orchard in Xintang Town (N 22.38Ë, E 108.61Ë), Qinzhou City, Guangxi province. The incidence of leaf spots in the orchard was above 20%. Each sample was cut into multiple pieces targeting zone between symptomatic and healthy plant tissues, disinfected with 75% ethanol for 10 s and 1% sodium hypochlorite (NaClO) for 1 min, and then washed three times with sterilized distilled water. The sterilized leaf tissues were placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and incubated at 28°C in darkness for one week. The growing hyphae from each sample was transferred to fresh PDA. The pieces from each leaf yielded a similar fungal morphotype over 75% of the time, and a representative one from each leaf was retained and called LZ1-1 and LZ3-1. The resulting colonies were incubated on the PDA for 7 days with gray to white aerial tufted hyphae, and abundant colorless to pale orange conidia in center of colony. The conidia were smooth, apex obtuse, base truncate, straight, cylindrical, and the contents remained granular. The conidial size of LZ1-1 was 10.6 to 21.4 × 4.5 to 9.1 µm (n=100) and that of LZ3-1 was 12.7 to 16.7 × 5.5 to 8.0 µm (n=100). Appressoria of LZ1-1 (6.9 to 14.9 × 6.0 to 11.1 µm) (n=100) and LZ3-1 (6.5 to 15.4 × 5.4 to 11.4 µm) (n=100) were pale to medium brown, ovoid to bullet-shaped, not nodose, and smooth-walled to undulate. DNA was extracted from two isolates, followed by PCR amplification and sequencing using primers for the rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS), actin (ACT), calmodulin (CAL), chitin synthase (CHS-1), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), and ß-tubulin (TUB2) (Damm et al. 2012). The resulting sequences were deposited in GenBank (ITS: MW494453 and MW494454, ACT: MW495034 and MW495035, CAL: MW495036 and MW495037, CHS-1: MW495038 and MW495039, GAPDH: MW495040 and MW495041, TUB2: MW495042 and MW495043). The concatenated sequences comprised of six genomic regions of LZ1-1, LZ3-1 and other sequences of Colletotrichum obtained from GenBank were used to construct a Neighbor-Joining (NJ) tree with 1000 bootstrap replicates using MEGA4 (Tamura et al. 2007). The results revealed both LZ1-1 and LZ3-1 were clustered with type strain of C. karstii with high bootstrap value. The pathogenicity of the two isolates was determined by inoculating on leaves of 1-year-old litchi saplings in the greenhouse. Slight scratches were made on the surface of healthy leaves and 10 µL of spore suspension (106 conidia/mL) in 0.1% Tween 20 were inoculated onto each wounded spot. The blank control groups were inoculated with 10 µL 0.1% Tween 20. Each isolate was inoculated onto at least 27 leaves of three saplings, with each leaf wounded at spots. The inoculated saplings were placed in a greenhouse (12 h/12 h light/dark, 25 ± 2°C), and humidity maintained by covering plastic bags. The leaves inoculated with spore suspension showed reddish-brown spots after one week, while no symptoms were observed in the control. Each fungal isolate was consistently reisolated from inoculated leaves, thus fulfilling Koch's postulates. It was reported that members of the C. acutatum species complex and the C. gloeosporioides species complex could cause anthracnose on litchi (Ling et al. 2019), including C. gloeosporioides, C. siamense, C. fioriniae, and C. simmondsii (Ling et al. 2019; 2020). To our knowledge, this is the first report of anthracnose on litchi in China caused by C. karstii, a member of the C. boninense species complex. This study expands the understanding of the pathogen of anthracnose on litchi which can lead to improved management and control.
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Mango is one of the important commercially cultivated fruit crops in southern China. In continuing research on foliar diseases of mango in south of China during 2016-2017, leaf spot disease was common at all mango orchards investigated. The purpose of this study was to investigate Fusarium species associated with leaf spots of mango in the main production areas of China, and to identify them to species. Twenty-two Fusarium isolates were obtained from diseased leaves from seven provinces (Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, Sichuan and Yunnan), and then identified using morphological characteristics and phylogenetic analysis. These isolates were from seven species: F. concentricum, F. hainanense, F. mangiferae, F. pernambucanum, F. proliferatum, F. sulawesiense, and F. verticillioides. We found all 22 isolates to be capable of causing leaf spot symptoms on artificially wounded leaves. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. concentricum, F. hainanense, F. mangiferae, F. pernambucanum, F. sulawesiense and F. verticillioides associated with leaf spots on mango in China, and the first for F. concentricum, F. hainanense, F. pernambucanum, F. sulawesiense from mango worldwide. This is one of the few reports on Fusarium species as potential causal agents of mango leaf spots.
Asunto(s)
Fusarium , Mangifera , China , Fusarium/genética , Filogenia , Enfermedades de las PlantasRESUMEN
Zizyphus mauritiana Lam. is an important tropical fruit tree and has significant economic value. It is widely planted in Hainan, Guangdong, Guangxi and Fujian provinces in China (Yang et al. 2017). In March 2019, leaf spot was observed on leaves of Z. mauritiana at Bagui fields in Nanning, Guangxi, China, with incidence exceeding 50%. Symptomatic leaves developed a yellow to tan-brown sunken lesion and finally abscised. To isolate the pathogen causing the symptoms, small pieces (5 × 5 mm) of infected leaves were surface sterilized by exposure to 75% ethanol for 10 sec, 1% sodium hypochlorite for 1 min and rinsed three times in sterile water. Fifty pieces were isolated, surface sterilized, and pieces were plated onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) and grown at 28°C for 7 days. The isolation rate of Colletotrichum species was 100%. Three representative isolates (DQZ3-1, DQZ3-2 and DQZ3-3) were selected for further study. Mycelia were greyish-white for all three isolates, with isolate DQZ3-1 also appearing dark green in the center of the colony. Conidia were elliptical, aseptate and hyaline, with sizes of 13.4 ± 0.12 µm × 5.7 ± 0.1 µm, 14.8 ± 0.1 µm × 5.8 ± 0.1 µm and 15.1 ± 0.1 µm × 5.5 ± 0.1 µm for DQZ3-1, DQZ3-2 and DQZ3-3, respectively. Genomic DNA was extracted using the DNAsecure Plant Kit [Tiangen Biotech (Beijing) Co., Ltd] and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS), partial actin (ACT), calmodulin (CAL), chitin synthase (CHS-1), beta-tubulin (TUB2), and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) genes were sequenced (Weir et al. 2012). Phylogenetic analysis of the three isolates was performed with MEGA-X (Version 10.0) based on sequences of multiple loci (ITS, ACT, CAL, CHS-1, TUB2 and GAPDH) using Maximum Likelihood analysis. Isolate DQZ3-1 was identified as C. fructicola, and the other two isolates, DQZ3-2 and DQZ3-3, were identified as C. siamense (accessions MT039396 to MT039410, for ACT, CAL, CHS-1, GAPDH and TUB2 of DQZ3-1, DQZ3-2 and DQZ3-3; MT041651 to MT041653 for ITS of DQZ3-1, DQZ3-2 and DQZ3-3). Pathogenicity tests were conducted on 1-year-old plants. Young, healthy leaves were artificially wounded by gently scratching with a sterile needle and 10 µl droplets of conidial suspension (106 spores/ml) applied per wound site for each isolate. Some wounded leaves were inoculated with 10 µl droplets of water as controls. Each isolate was inoculated onto three plants, with 15 leaves at least for each plant, same as controls. All inoculated plants were sprayed with water and covered with plastic bags to maintain high humidity. Symptomatic lesions were observed on the inoculated leaves after 7 days at 28°C, whereas no symptoms were observed on the control leaves. To fulfill Koch's postulates, fungi were re-isolated from 50 symptomatic leaf pieces and fungi re-isolated from each leaf piece were morphologically identical to the inoculated isolates, for a 100% isolation frequency. To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf spot caused by C. fructicola and C. siamense on Z. mauritiana worldwide. This research may accelerate the development of future epidemiological studies and management strategies for anthracnose caused by C. fructicola and C. siamense on Z. mauritiana.
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Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) is a leafy, annual, solanaceous plant grown commercially for its leaves in China. In continuing research on foliar diseases of tobacco in Guizhou province in August 2019, diseased leaves of tobacco that had sandy beige, elliptical or irregular shaped lesions, with brown in edge, and surrounded by yellow halos on 40% of leaves on 5% plants were obtained (cv. Yunyan 87) in Zhenan (28.55° N, 107.43° E), Guizhou, China (Fig. 1A, 1B). Diseased leaf segments were surface sterilized and plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Isolate (T41) was selected for identification. The colonies had white aerial hyphae, with orange-red on the underside when cultured on PDA (Fig. 1G, 1H). The colonies had woolly aerial hyphae, white to grey eventually, and produced pycnidia on oatmeal agar (OA) (Boerema et al. 2004) (Fig. 1I, 1J). Pycnidia were dark, spherical or flat spherical, and 69.2-178.0 µm in diameter. Conidia were oval mostly, aseptate, usually guttulate, and the size was 5.0 - 6.5 µm × 3.2 - 5.4 µm (Fig. 1K, 1L). The rDNA internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) with primers ITS1f/ITS4 (White et al. 1990; Gardes and Bruns 1993), 28S ribosomal RNA gene (LSU) with primers LROR/LR7 (Rehner and Samuels 1994), beta-tubulin gene (TUB2) with primers Btub2Fd/Btub4Rd (Woudenberg et al. 2009) and RNA polymerase II second largest subunit gene (RPB2) with primers RPB2-5F2/fRPB2-7cR (Liu et al. 1999) of T41 were sequenced (GenBank accession numbers were MN704804, MN710367, MN718012 and MN718013, respectively). Maximum Likelihood (ML) analyses and Bayesian Inferences (BI) analyses based on concatenated these four sequences were conducted with RAxML v. 7.2.6 and MrBayes v. 3.2.1, respectively, which showed that T41 comprised a clade with Epicoccum latusicollum strains (CGMCC 3.18346 and LC 8153) (ML/BI = 100/1) (Fig. 2). Based on morphological and multi-gene molecular data, isolate T41 was identified as E. latusicollum described as a new taxon by Chen et al. (2017). To verify pathogenicity, tobacco plants at seedling stage (7-8 leaves) without visible disease were inoculated using conidial suspension (106 spores/ml), following Guo et al. (2020). All inoculated plants were maintained in a greenhouse with relative humidity ranging from 50% to 85% at 28 °C under a 12/12 h light/dark cycle. Seven days after incubation, typical symptoms were observed on inoculated leaves but not on control leaves (Fig. 1C, 1D, 1E, 1F). Koch's postulates were fulfilled by re-isolation of E. latusicollum from diseased leaves. E. latusicollum has been reported to cause black root on yam in China (Han et al. 2019). Meanwhile, there are many plants could be caused leaf spot by this genus, such as Lablab purpureus (Mahadevakumar et al. 2014) and Bletilla striata (Zhou et al. 2018). However, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of E. latusicollum causing leaf spot on tobacco in China. Because considerable loss occurred due to infection from E. latusicollum on tobacco leaves, this pathogen is worthy of further study and disease management practices need to be developed to prevent further losses.
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Mango is an economically important fruit crop in southern China. However, leaf spots restrict the development of mango trees, reducing the yield and production. Pestalotioid fungi are one of the major agents causing leaf spots on mango. During 2016 and 2017, 21 isolates of pestalotioid fungi associated with leaf spots on mango leaves were collected from five provinces in southern China: Guangxi, Hainan, Yunnan, Guangdong, and Fujian. All 21 isolates were subjected to morphological characterization and DNA sequence analysis. The morphological data were combined with analyses of concatenated sequences of the ITS (internal transcribed spacer), TEF 1-α (translation elongation factor), and TUB2 (ß-tubulin) for higher resolution of the species identity of these isolates. The results showed that these isolates belong to Neopestalotiopsis clavispora, Pestalotiopsis adusta, P. anacardiacearum, P. asiatica, P. photinicola, P. saprophyta, P. trachicarpicola, and Pseudopestalotiopsis ampullacea. Pathogenicity test results showed that all these species could cause symptoms. On detached mango leaves (cv. Tainong), early foliar symptoms on leaves were small yellow-to-brown lesions. Later, these spots expanded with uneven borders, turned white to gray, and coalesced to form larger gray patches. To our knowledge, this is the first description of N. clavispora, P. adusta, P. asiatica, P. photinicola, P. saprophyta, P. trachicarpicola, or Ps. ampullacea as causal agents for leaf spots on mango worldwide.
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Mangifera , Xylariales , China , Filogenia , Enfermedades de las PlantasRESUMEN
Mango (Mangifera indica L.) is an economically significant fruit crop in provinces of southern China including Hainan, Yunnan, Sichuan, Guizhou, Guangdong and Fujian. The objective of this study was to examine the diversity of Colletotrichum species infecting mango cultivars in major growing areas in China, using morphological and molecular techniques together with pathogenicity tests on detached leaves and fruits. Over 200 Colletotrichum isolates were obtained across all mango orchards investigated, and 128 of them were selected for sequencing and analyses of actin (ACT), chitin synthase (CHS-1), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, ß-tubulin (TUB2) genomic regions. Our results showed that the most common fungal isolates associated with mango in southern China involved 13 species: Colletotrichum asianum, C. cliviicola, C. cordylinicola, C. endophytica, C. fructicola, C. gigasporum, C. gloeosporioides, C. karstii, C. liaoningense, C. musae, C. scovillei, C. siamense and C. tropicale. The dominant species were C. asianum and C. siamense each accounting for 30%, and C. fructicola for 25%. Only C. asianum, C. fructicola, C. scovillei and C. siamense have previously been reported on mango, while the other nine Colletotrichum species listed above were first reports associated with mango in China. From this study, five Colletotrichum species, namely C. cordylinicola, C. endophytica, C. gigasporum, C. liaoningense and C. musae were the first report on mango worldwide. Pathogenicity tests revealed that all 13 species caused symptoms on artificially wounded mango fruit and leaves (cv. Tainong). There was no obvious relationship between aggressiveness and the geographic origin of the isolates. These findings will help in mango disease management and future disease resistance breeding.
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Colletotrichum/genética , ADN de Hongos/genética , Mangifera/microbiología , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , China , Filogenia , Hojas de la Planta/microbiologíaRESUMEN
We report here a draft genome sequence of an ex-type strain of Aspergillus neoellipticus, NRRL 5109, which was isolated from pus of a case of chronic emphysema. The final assembly consists of 160 scaffolds totaling 27.55 Mbp (G+C content, 49.96%) and 8,858 predicted genes.