Variability in isolates of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides causing anthracnose diseases of Stylosanthes species

1985 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 444 ◽  
Author(s):  
DF Cameron ◽  
JAG Irwin ◽  
RGO O'Brien

Field surveys for anthracnose disease in pastures and seed crops of Stylosanthes spp. detected a rapid spread of Type B disease in the wet coast region of northern Queensland in 1978, but no new pathogenic races of Type B were found. The recovery of a pathogenic isolate of Glomerella cingulata, the sexual stage of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides, from a Type B isolate suggests that G. cingulata may be a significant component in the life cycle of the disease and may be involved in the development of new pathogenic races of the fungus. With Type A disease, there was evidence of differential specialization of isolates on S. humilis cv. Paterson and S. scabra cv. Fitzr0y.A seed crop of S. hamata cv. Verano was severely damaged by Type A anthracnose, but isolates from the crop produced only slight damage on plants in glasshouse inoculation tests. Plants induced to flower and seed at 8 weeks of age in a controlled environment room were no more susceptible to the seed crop isolates than plants 2, 4 or 6 weeks old.


1978 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 305 ◽  
Author(s):  
JAG Irwin ◽  
DF Cameron

Two anthracnose diseases caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides have been found in Stylosanthes spp. in northern Australia. The two diseases can be readily distinguished by their symptoms and their pure-culture characteristics. The disease classified as type A was widespread, but the other, type B, was found at only two localities. In spray-inoculation tests under controlled conditions, S. guianensis cv. Endeavour was highly susceptible to type B isolates, and some lines of S. fruticosa, S. humilis, S. scabra and S. viscosa were highly susceptible to the type A isolates. Two pathogenic races of type A were recognized from the reaction of S. viscosa 33941 towards them. The importance of these diseases is discussed, together with aspects of disease dissemination and future control strategies.



1984 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 473 ◽  
Author(s):  
JAG Irwin ◽  
DF Cameron ◽  
D Ratcliff

The influence of temperature, period of leaf wetness after inoculation, and relative humidity on the development of the type A and type B diseases of Stylosanthes spp. caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides was studied in controlled environment cabinets. Severe disease of both types developed in plants incubated at temperatures of 20-30�C, and given 24 h of leaf wetness after inoculation. Provided these conditions were imposed, high levels of disease developed following the leaf wetness period, irrespective of the relative humidity (40-50% or >95%). High levels of disease developed for both the type A and type B combinations at temperatures in the range 20-3OoC, but only the type A disease developed at >34�C. Neither disease developed at constant temperatures of 15 or 37�C. The use of these results in the development of a model to predict field infection is discussed.



Plant Disease ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 90 (7) ◽  
pp. 971-971 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. K. Berner ◽  
C. A. Cavin ◽  
M. B. McMahon ◽  
I. Loumbourdis

In early October of 2005, dying Salsola tragus L. (Russian thistle, tumbleweed), family Chenopodiaceae, plants were found along the Aegean Sea at Kryopigi Beach, Greece (40°02′29″N, 23°29′02″E, elevation 0 m). All of the 30 to 40 plants in the area were diseased and approximately 80% were dead or dying. All plants were relatively large (approximately 1 m tall × 0.5 m diameter), and living portions of diseased plants were flowering. Dying plants had irregular, necrotic lesions extending the length of the stems. Leaves of these plants were also necrotic. Lesions on stems and leaves were dark brown and usually coalesced. Diseased stem pieces were taken to the European Biological Control Laboratory, USDA, ARS at the American Farm School in Thessaloniki, Greece. There, diseased stem pieces were surface disinfested for 15 min with 0.5% NaOCl and placed on moist filter paper in petri dishes. Numerous, waxy subepidermal acervuli with black setae were observed in all lesions after 2 to 3 days. Conidiophores were simple, short, and erect. Conidia were one-celled, hyaline, ovoid to oblong, falcate to straight, 12.9 to 18.0 × 2.8 to 5.5 μm (mode 16.1 × 4.5 μm). These characters conformed to the description of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides (Penz.) Penz. & Sacc. in Penz. (2). Conidia were placed on modified potato carrot agar and axenic cultures from these isolations were sent to the quarantine facility of the Foreign Disease-Weed Science Research Unit, USDA, ARS, Fort Detrick, MD for testing. On the basis of DNA sequences, two variants within S. tragus have been described in California and named “Type A” and “Type B” (1). Conidia were harvested from 14-day-old cultures grown on 20% V8 juice agar, and healthy stems and leaves of 18 30-day-old plants of S. tragus Type A and 10 Type B plants were spray inoculated with an aqueous conidial suspension (1.0 × 106 conidia/ml plus 0.1% non-ionic surfactant). Three control plants of each type were sprayed with water and surfactant only. Plants were placed in an environmental chamber (18 h of dew in darkness at 25°C). After 1 day, all plants were transferred to a greenhouse (20 to 25°C, 30 to 50% relative humidity, and natural light augmented with 12-h light periods with 500-W sodium vapor lights). Lesions developed on stems of inoculated Type A plants after 5 days. After 14 days, all inoculated Type A plants were dead. Lesions on Type B plants were small and localized; all plants were diseased but no plants died. No symptoms occurred on control plants. C. gloeosporioides was reisolated 14 to 21 days after inoculation from stem pieces of all inoculated plants of both types of S. tragus. This isolate of C. gloeosporioides is a destructive pathogen on S. tragus Type A and is a potential candidate for biological control of this weed in the United States. To our knowledge, this is the first report of anthracnose caused by C. gloeosporioides on S. tragus in Greece. A voucher specimen has been deposited with the U.S. National Fungus Collections, Beltsville, MD (BPI 871126). Nucleotide sequences for the internal transcribed spacers (ITS 1 and 2) were deposited in GenBank (Accession No. DQ344621) and exactly matched sequences of the teleomorph, Glomerella cingulata. References: (1) F. Ryan and D. Ayres. Can. J. Bot. 78:59, 2000. (2) B. C. Sutton. Page 15 in: Colletotrichum Biology, Pathology and Control. J. A. Bailey and M. J. Jeger, eds. CAB International Mycological Institute, Wallingford, UK, 1992.



1990 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 645 ◽  
Author(s):  
ID Godwin ◽  
DF Cameron ◽  
GH Gordon

Plants were regenerated from leaf-derived callus cultures of the diploid species Stylosanthes guianensis (four genotypes), and the tetraploid species S. scabra (four genotypes), and S. hamata (one genotype). No morphological variation was observed in the 97 regenerated plants (SC1) of S. scabra, but 23 of the 104 SC1 plants of S. hamata were sterile dwarfs. In a field experiment with 42 SC2 families of S. scabra, four were low yielding and five segregated for late flowering. Dwarfs were again found in SC2 families of S. hamata, and both high and low yielding families were observed. Glasshouse inoculations with various pathogenic races of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides were performed to assess the reactions of 276 S. guianensis, 56 S. scabra and 62 S. hamata SC2 families. A major gene mutation from dominant to recessive appeared to confer increased susceptibility in S. hamata SC2 families. Eight of twelve tetraploid S. guianensis cv. Graham families exhibited partial resistance to Type B race 3 anthracnose. Two S. scabra cv. Fitzroy families segregated for reaction to Type A race 1 anthracnose. Selfed progenies (SC3 generation) of two of the three partially resistant SC2 individuals maintained their partial resistance, indicating stable inheritance. Segregation data suggested that changes in minor genes caused this variation.



1984 ◽  
Vol 32 (6) ◽  
pp. 631 ◽  
Author(s):  
JAG Irwin ◽  
PR Trevorrow ◽  
DF Cameron

The histopathology of compatible interactions between type A and type B Colletotrichum gloeosporioides and Stylosanthes scabra cv. Fitzroy and Stylosanthes guianensis cv. Endeavour was studied by light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy at various times after inoculation. Quantitative studies of germination and penetration processes with whole leaf mounts showed that the processes were similar for the two diseases but that unmelanized appressoria were produced more rapidly (3 h after inoculation) by the type A fungus on both hosts than by the type B fungus on Endeavour (6 h after inoculation). After 6 h for the type A fungus and 12 h for the type B fungus, the majority of appressoria were melanized. First evidence of penetration on the whole leaf mounts was observed 12 h after inoculation on all three interactions. Percentage penetration of the susceptible Endeavour by the type B fungus was significantly higher than that for the type A fungus on Fitzroy (susceptible) and Endeavour (intermediate). Subcuticular infection hyphae were present in transverse leaf sections of both diseases after 12 h and both intercellular and intracellular fungal invasion were observed after 24 h. Acewuli of the type A hngus had developed on Fitzroy by 96 h, whereas acervuli of the type B fungus had developed on Endeavour by 144 h. Mesophyll cells were particularly susceptible to fungal invasion and rapidly collapsed. Swelling of epidermal cell walls in response to invasion was also observed but this did not confer resistance.



Author(s):  
S. Fujinaga ◽  
K. Maruyama ◽  
C.W. Williams ◽  
K. Sekhri ◽  
L. Dmochowski

Yumoto and Dmochowski (Cancer Res.27, 2098 (1967)) reported the presence of mature and immature type C leukemia virus particles in leukemic organs and tissues such as lymph nodes, spleen, thymus, liver, and kidneys of SJL/J strain mice with Hodgki's-like disease or reticulum cell neoplasm (type B). In an attempt to ascertain the possibility that this neoplasia may be of viral origin, experiments with induction and transmission of this neoplasm were carried out using cell-free extracts of leukemic organs from an SJL/J strain mouse with spontaneous disease.It has been possible to induce the disease in low-leukemia BALB/c and C3HZB strain mice and serially transfer the neoplasia by cell-free extracts of leukemic organs of these mice. Histological examination revealed the neoplasia to be of either reticulum cell-type A or type B. Serial transfer is now in its fifth passage. In addition leukemic spleen from another SJL/J strain mouse with spontaneous reticulum cell neoplasm (type A) was set up in tissue culture and is now in its 141st serial passage in vitro. Preliminary results indicate that cell-free material of 39th tissue culture passage can reproduce neoplasia in BALB/c mice.



1992 ◽  
Vol 68 (03) ◽  
pp. 297-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Galli ◽  
Paul Comfurius ◽  
Tiziano Barbui ◽  
Robert F A Zwaal ◽  
Edouard M Bevers

SummaryPlasmas of 16 patients positive for both IgG anticardiolipin (aCL) antibodies and lupus anticoagulant (LA) antibodies were subjected to adsorption with liposomes containing cardiolipin. In 5 of these plasmas both the anticardiolipin and the anticoagulant activities were co-sedimented with the liposomes in a dose-dependent manner, whereas in the remaining cases only the anticardiolipin activity could be removed by the liposomes, leaving the anticoagulant activity (LA) in the supernatant plasma. aCL antibodies purified from the first 5 plasmas were defined as aCL-type A, while the term aCL-type B was used for antibodies in the other 11 plasmas, from which 2 were selected for this study.Prolongation of the dRVVT was produced by affinity-purified aCL-type A antibodies in plasma of human as well as animal (bovine, rat and goat) origin. aCL-type B antibodies were found to be devoid of anticoagulant activity, while the corresponding supernatants containing LA IgG produced prolongation of the dRVVT only in human plasma.These anticoagulant activities of aCL-type A and of LA IgG's were subsequently evaluated in human plasma depleted of β2-glycoprotein I (β2-GPI), a protein which was previously shown to be essential in the binding of aCL antibodies to anionic phospholipids. Prolongation of the dRVVT by aCL-type A antibodies was abolished using β2-GPI deficient plasma, but could be restored upon addition of β2-GPI. In contrast, LA IgG caused prolongation of the dRVVT irrespective of the presence or absence of β2-GPI.Since β2-GPI binds to negatively-charged phospholipids and impedes the conversion of prothrombin by the factor Xa/Va enzyme complex (Nimpf et al., Biochim Biophys Acta 1986; 884: 142–9), comparison was made of the effect of aCL-type A and aCL-type B antibodies on the rate of thrombin formation in the presence and absence of β2-GPI. This was measured in a system containing highly purified coagulation factors Xa, Va and prothrombin and lipid vesicles composed of 20 mole% phosphatidylserine and 80 mole% phosphatidylcholine. No inhibition on the rate of thrombin formation was observed with both types of aCL antibodies when either β2-GPI or the lipid vesicles were omitted. Addition of β2-GPI to the prothrombinase assay in the presence of lipid vesicles causes a time-dependent inhibition which was not affected by the presence of aCL-type B or non-specific IgG. In contrast, the presence of aCL-type A antibodies dramatically increased the anticoagulant effect of β2-GPI. These data indicate that the anticoagulant activity of aCL-type A antibodies in plasma is mediated by β2-GPI.



2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-42
Author(s):  
Wiyoga Triharto ◽  
Bambang Perkasa Alam

Ratu harbor beach is one of the mainstay tourist sites for the Regional Government of Sukabumi Regency in bringing PAD, besides public transportation facilities and terminals have a major role in supporting the queen port as a tourist attraction so that tourists are comfortable and facilitated in accessing through public transportation. The condition of the Pelabuhan Ratu Terminal, Sukabumi Regency is currently very poor, poorly maintained, and many supporting facilities are damaged and inadequate. This study aims to identify problems and formulate the type B terminal arrangement in Sukabumi Regency. The method used is descriptive qualitative in order to get a picture of the problems of the situation and conditions currently taking place or occurring in the present and the study of policies. Collecting data by field surveys, literature studies and interviews. The results in this study get a terminal B type terminal design concept Sukabumi Regency according to current and future needs.



2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 10
Author(s):  
Noar Muda Satyawan ◽  
Shelly Tutupoho ◽  
Yusli Wardiatno ◽  
Makoto Tsuchiya

Erosion rate on corals due to activities of other biota is called bioerosion. The rock-boring urchin, Echinometra mathaei, when it is abundant, plays a significant role in benthic ecosystems, including biological processes like coral erosion. During feeding, E. mathaei erodes calcium carbonate besides grazing on algae living on coral, so it plays an important role in both organic and inorganic carbons in coral reefs. The urchin E. mathaei actively feeds during the night time (nocturnal grazer). Although in Okinawa four types (A-D) of the urchin exist, the research only focused on the types A and B. Type A of E. mathaei produced 0.44951 g feces per day on average while type B produced 0.38030 g feces per day. CaCO3 analysis in feces and gut contents showed bioerosion rate of E. mathaei type A was 0.64492 g/individu/day, and 0.54436 g/individu/day in type B. There were no significant differences in bioerosion impact of E. mathaei type A and B© Laju erosi pada karang yang disebabkan oleh biota, dikenal dengan bioerosi. Bulu babi jenis Echinometra mathaei, ketika melimpah, menjadi sangat berpengaruh terhadap ekosistem bentik termasuk proses biologi seperti erosi karang. Selama aktivitas makan, E. mathaei menggerus kalsium karbonat dalam proporsi yang besar di samping alga yang tumbuh menempel pada karang sehingga memiliki peran penting dalam siklus karbon organik dan anorganik di ekosistem terumbu karang. Bulu babi E. mathaei aktif mencari makan pada malam hari (nocturnal grazer). Meskipun di Okinanawa ada 4 tipe (A-D), pada eksperimen kali ini memfokuskan pada tipe A dan B saja. Tipe A E. mathaei rata-rata memproduksi 0,44951 g feses/hari dan tipe B memproduksi 0,38030 g feses/hari. Berdasarkan analisis CaCO3 yang dilakukan pada feses dan isi lambung, laju bioerosi yang disebabkan oleh E. mathaei tipe A sebesar 0,64492 g/individu/hari sedangkan tipe B sebesar 0,54436 g/individu/hari. Tidak terdapat perbedaan dampak bioerosi yang signifikan antara E. mathaei tipe A dan B©



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