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First Report of Colletotrichum gigasporum causing Anthracnose of chili pepper in South Korea.
Choi, Hyo-Won; Hassan, Oliul; Ryu, Hyunjoo; Ju, Hyeon-Yeong; Hong, Sung Kee.
Affiliation
  • Choi HW; National Academy of Agricultural Science, Disaster Management Divion, Rural Development Administration, Jeonju, 54875, Korea, Jeonju, Korea (the Republic of), 54875; hyon338@korea.kr.
  • Hassan O; National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Crop Protection Division, 166, Nongsaengmyeong-ro, Wanju-gun, Korea (the Republic of), 55365; nobinpstu@gmail.com.
  • Ryu H; National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, crop life safety, 166 Nongsaengmyeong-ro, Iseo-myeon, Suwon, Korea (the Republic of), 55365; hyunjoor@korea.kr.
  • Ju HY; National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Wanju, Korea (the Republic of); hyhyjj128@korea.kr.
  • Hong SK; National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Crop Protection, 166, Nongsaengmyeong-ro, Iseo-myeon, Wanju-gun, Jeollabuk-do, Korea (the Republic of), 55365; sukihong@korea.kr.
Plant Dis ; 2024 Jul 25.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39054605
ABSTRACT
Anthracnose, a destructive fungal disease, poses a significant threat to chili pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) production worldwide (de Silva et al. 2019). In South Korea, anthracnose outbreaks have traditionally been attributed to several Colletotrichum species such as C. gloeosporioides and C. acutatum. About 10% of the yield (chili production) is lost annually in South Korea due to chili anthracnose (Oo et al. 2020). During field surveys conducted in August 2017, symptomatic lesions resembling anthracnose were observed on chili pepper in two farmer's fields (Gochang and Cheongyang) in South Korea. Affected fruits exhibited characteristic symptoms, including circular sunken lesions with dark margins and abundant orange spore masses on the surface. About 20% of chili pepper fruit were affected in each field with an area of about 0.2 ha. Five putative Colletotrichum spp. isolates were obtained from six affected fruits (three from each field) following the procedure described by Cai et el. (2009). Three isolates (C01049, C01111, and C01115), representing each location, were selected to identify at the species level. Colonies on potato dextrose agar (incubated at 25°C in the dark for 7 days) were cottony with entire margins, white aerial mycelium and dark gray in the center. Conidia were hyaline, aseptate, cylindrical with bothnds round, and 17.8 - 30.5 × 6.0 -10.0 µm (mean 23.8 ×7.9 µm, n = 30). Appressoria were dark brown, irregular but mostly ovoid with smooth walls. These morphological features align with those of Colletotrichum spp. within the Colletotrichum gigasporum species (Liu et al. 2014). The identity of the pathogen was further confirmed through multi-locus phylogenetic analysis. The target genes including ITS, ACT, CHS-1, GAPDH, TUB2, and GS were amplified and sequenced using the primer sets ITS1/ITS4, ACT 512F/ ACT-783R, CHS-79F/ CHS-345R, GDF/GDR, T1/Bt2b, and GSF1/GSR1, respectively (Weir et al. 2012; Liu et al. 2014). The resulting sequences were deposited in GenBank (accession no ITS MT605261, MT605262, LC823714; ACT MT612991, MT612992, LC823718; CHS-1 MT612993, MT612994, LC823717; GAPDH LC811375, LC811376, LC823716; TUB2 MT612997, MT612998, LC823715; GS LC811377, LC811378, LC823719). The constructed Bayesian and maximum likelihood tree based on combined sequences of ITS, ACT, CHS-1, GAPDH, TUB2, and GS confirmed the identification of the isolates (C01049, C01111, C01115) as C. gigasporum. Pathogenicity tests were conducted by inoculating healthy chili fruit with 70 µL of a conidial suspension (1×106 conidia /mL) of pure cultures of the isolates. The conidial suspension was applied on 10 wounded or 10 non-wounded fruit. The same number of fruit were treated with sterile distilled water as controls. Within 5 days of inoculation, symptoms consistent with anthracnose developed on the inoculated wounded fruit, whereas non-wounded and control fruit remained asymptomatic. This experiment was repeated twice. Colletotrichum gigasporum was re-isolated from diseased tissue of inoculated fruit. Colletotrichum gigasporum has been identified as the cause of anthracnose on Dalbergia odorifera, Carica papaya in China, and Brassica oleracea in India (Wan et al., 2018; Saini et al. 2022; He et al. 2023). To the best of our knowledge, this report marks the first documented instance of C. gigasporum causing anthracnose of chili pepper in South Korea. These results indicate that various species of Colletotrichum can be the fungi causing chili pepper anthracnose. The findings of this study emphasize the need for effective disease management strategies to mitigate impact of C. gigasporum on chili pepper cultivation in the region.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Plant Dis Year: 2024 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Plant Dis Year: 2024 Type: Article