scholarly journals First Report of Nigrospora oryzae Causing Leaf Spot on Ginger in China

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zeng-Liang LIU ◽  
Shuangyun Zhou ◽  
Liangliang Qi ◽  
Xiaoguo Wang ◽  
Juan Song ◽  
...  

Ginger (Zingiber officinale Rosc.) is an herbal crop widely grown in China for its medicinal and savory qualities of rhizomes. In August 2018, leaf spot symptoms were observed on ginger plants grown in a field in Nanning, Guangxi Province (E108°3'54", N23°14'48"). Disease incidence was above 50%, and in a Nanning field, rhizome yield loss was almost 30%. Early symptoms appeared as circular, necrotic areas that later developed into circular or irregular spots. The centers of the lesions were white and often surrounded by chlorotic halos (Figure S1A). In severe infections, the spots frequently coalesced, causing the entire leaf to become withered and curved. Small pieces (3 to 4 mm2) from the margin of infected lesions were surface sterilized in 75% ethanol for 40 s followed by 1% NaOCl for 90 s, placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and incubated at 28°C in the dark for 4 days. Hyphal tips from the leading edge of colonies were transferred to fresh PDA plates to obtain pure cultures. Fungal colonies were initially white, then turned black/grayish brown when maintained in the dark at 28°C after 5 days (Figure S1B). Conidia were single-celled, brown, or black, smooth, spherical, or subspherical with diameters varying from 9.5 to 15 μm (mean = 13.5 ± 0.72 µm, n = 50) (Figure S1C). Based on these morphological characteristics, the isolates were provisionally identified as Nigrospora oryzae (Ellis 1971; Hudson 1963). Genomic DNA was extracted from a representative isolate Sjb-2. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, beta-tubulin (TUB2), and the translation elongation factor 1-alpha (TEF1-α) were amplified using primer pairs including ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), Bt-2a/Bt-2b (Glass and Donaldson 1995), and EF1-728F/EF1-986R (Carbone et al. 1999), respectively. The obtained ITS sequence (GenBank accession no. MW555242), TUB2 sequence (MZ048644), and TEF1-α sequence (MZ048645) showed >99% similarity with several GenBank sequences of N. oryzae (KF516962 for ITS; MK550707 for TUB2; and KY019425 for TEF1-α, respectively). Based on the combined sequences of ITS, TUB2 and TEF1-α sequences, a phylogenetic tree was constructed using the maximum likelihood method and confirmed that the isolates were N. oryzae (Figure S2). Pathogenicity of the isolate was confirmed by fulfilling Koch’s postulates. Agar blocks (3 mm diameter) containing a fungal mycelium were placed on detached healthy leaves of ginger. The leaves were then wrapped with sterile polyethylene and incubated in a greenhouse at 25°C with 60% RH. Within 7 days, symptoms appeared on inoculated leaves similar to spots observed in the field, whereas controls remained symptomless. The same pathogen was reisolated from the spots. Pathogenicity tests were performed twice with three replications, indicating that N. oryzae is responsible for leaf spot disease on ginger. The disease in ginger caused by N. oryzae had been reported in Southern Africa (Grech et al. 1989). To our knowledge, this is the first report of N. oryzae causing leaf spot of ginger in China. In the field, this pathogen can substantially affect ginger's health and rhizome yield if no effective control measures are implemented. Therefore, management of the disease should be further investigated to avoid major economic losses.

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanxiang Qi ◽  
Yanping Fu ◽  
Jun Peng ◽  
Fanyun Zeng ◽  
Yanwei Wang ◽  
...  

Banana (Musa acuminate L.) is an important tropical fruit in China. During 2019-2020, a new leaf spot disease was observed on banana (M. acuminate L. AAA Cavendish, cv. Formosana) at two orchards of Chengmai county (19°48ʹ41.79″ N, 109°58ʹ44.95″ E), Hainan province, China. In total, the disease incidence was about 5% of banana trees (6 000 trees). The leaf spots occurred sporadically and were mostly confined to the leaf margin, and the percentage of the leaf area covered by lesions was less than 1%. Symptoms on the leaves were initially reddish brown spots that gradually expanded to ovoid-shaped lesions and eventually become necrotic, dry, and gray with a yellow halo. The conidia obtained from leaf lesions were brown, erect or curved, fusiform or elliptical, 3 to 4 septa with dimensions of 13.75 to 31.39 µm × 5.91 to 13.35 µm (avg. 22.39 × 8.83 µm). The cells of both ends were small and hyaline while the middle cells were larger and darker (Zhang et al. 2010). Morphological characteristics of the conidia matched the description of Curvularia geniculata (Tracy & Earle) Boedijn. To acquire the pathogen, tissue pieces (15 mm2) of symptomatic leaves were surface disinfected in 70% ethanol (10 s) and 0.8% NaClO (2 min), rinsed in sterile water three times, and transferred to potato dextrose agar (PDA) for three days at 28°C. Grayish green fungal colonies appeared, and then turned fluffy with grey and white aerial mycelium with age. Two representative isolates (CATAS-CG01 and CATAS-CG92) of single-spore cultures were selected for molecular identification. Genomic DNA was extracted from the two isolates, the internal transcribed spacer (ITS), large subunit ribosomal DNA (LSU rDNA), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), translation elongation factor 1-alpha (TEF1-α) and RNA polymerase II second largest subunit (RPB2) were amplified and sequenced with universal primers ITS1/ITS4, LROR/LR5, GPD1/GPD2, EF1-983F/EF1-2218R and 5F2/7cR, respectively (Huang et al. 2017; Raza et al. 2019). The sequences were deposited in GenBank (MW186196, MW186197, OK091651, OK721009 and OK491081 for CATAS-CG01; MZ734453, MZ734465, OK091652, OK721100 and OK642748 for CATAS-CG92, respectively). For phylogenetic analysis, MEGA7.0 (Kumar et al. 2016) was used to construct a Maximum Likelihood (ML) tree with 1 000 bootstrap replicates, based on a concatenation alignment of five gene sequences of the two isolates in this study as well as sequences of other Curvularia species obtained from GenBank. The cluster analysis revealed that isolates CATAS-CG01 and CATAS-CG92 were C. geniculata. Pathogenicity assays were conducted on 7-leaf-old banana seedlings. Two leaves from potted plants were stab inoculated by puncturing into 1-mm using a sterilized needle and placing 10 μl conidial suspension (2×106 conidia/ml) on the surface of wounded leaves and equal number of leaves were inoculated with sterile distilled water serving as control (three replicates). Inoculated plants were grown in the greenhouse (12 h/12 h light/dark, 28°C, 90% relative humidity). Necrotic lesions on inoculated leaves appeared seven days after inoculation, whereas control leaves remained healthy. The fungus was recovered from inoculated leaves, and its taxonomy was confirmed morphologically and molecularly, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. C. geniculata has been reported to cause leaf spot on banana in Jamaica (Meredith, 1963). To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. geniculata on banana in China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 94 (12) ◽  
pp. 1508-1508 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. Y. Chen ◽  
C. Sui ◽  
B. C. Gan ◽  
J. H. Wei ◽  
Y. K. Zhou

Patchouli (Pogostemon cablin (Blanco) Benth.) is mainly cultivated in Southeast Asia as a medicinal shrub and a source of patchouli oil used in perfumery. In 2008, a leaf spot disease was observed on patchouli plants grown on most farms (some farms had 99% incidence) in Wanning, the predominant cultivation location in the Hainan Province of China. The disease usually began at the tip of leaves, the main veins, or small veinlets. Severely irregular-shaped dark brown leaf spots expanded over 5 to 10 days, eventually causing infected leaves to abscise. The time from initial leaf lesions to abscission usually took 1 month. The disease was usually most severe in April and May, causing significant economic losses along with quality losses to patchouli oil extracted from leaves. To isolate the causal pathogen, diseased leaves were collected in August 2008 from a farm of the Hainan Branch Institute of Medicinal Plant Development in Wanning, surface sterilized in 75% ethanol for 1 min, transferred to potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated at 28°C for 14 days. Single-spore cultures of three isolates were obtained and identified as Corynespora cassiicola (Berk. & Curt.) Wei. on the basis of morphological and physiological features (1). Genomic DNA was extracted from all the cultures. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the rDNA was amplified using primers ITS1 (5′-TCCGATGGTGAACCTGCGG-3′) and ITS4 (5′-TCCTCCGCTTATTGATATGC-3′). Amplicons were 546 bp (GenBank Accession No. HM145960) and had 99% nucleotide identity with the corresponding sequence (GenBank Accession No. GU138988) of C. cassiicola isolated from cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz). To satisfy Koch's postulates, 50-day-old potted plants in a tent were sprayed until runoff with a spore suspension (1 × 106 spores/ml) prepared from 10-day-old cultures. Using this spray method, one isolate was inoculated separately onto nine leaves of three potted plants. The potted plants were covered with plastic bags to maintain high humidity for 48 h and then placed outside under natural environmental conditions (temperature 20 to 28°C). Another nine leaves of three potted plants, sprayed only with sterile water, served as noninoculated control plants. Leaf spot symptoms similar to those on diseased field plants appeared after 7 days on all inoculated plants. C. cassiicola was reisolated from all inoculated test plants. No symptoms were observed on the control plants. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. cassiicola causing a leaf spot disease on patchouli in China. Other previous reports of this disease were from Cuba (2). This pathogen has also been reported previously to be economically important on a number of other hosts. On patchouli plants, more attention should be given to prevention and control measures to help manage this disease. References: (1) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. Commonwealth Mycological Institute: Kew, Surrey, England, 1971. (2) I. Sandoval et al. Cienc. Tec. Agric., Prot. Plant. 10:21, 1987.


Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (1) ◽  
pp. 138-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Z. Fu ◽  
M. Yang ◽  
G. Y. Li ◽  
J. R. Wu ◽  
J. Z. Zhang ◽  
...  

Chinese bean tree, Catalpa fargesii f. duciouxii (Dode) Gilmour, is an ornamental arbor plant. Its roots, leaves, and flowers have long been used for medicinal purposes in China. During July 2010, severe outbreaks of leaf spot disease on this plant occurred in Kunming, Yunnan Province. The disease incidence was greater than 90%. The symptoms on leaves began as dark brown lesions surrounded by chlorotic halos, and later became larger, round or irregular spots with gray to off-white centers surrounded by dark brown margins. Leaf tissues (3 × 3 mm), cut from the margins of lesions, were surface disinfected in 0.1% HgCl2 solution for 3 min, rinsed three times in sterile water, plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated at 28°C. The same fungus was consistently isolated from the diseased leaves. Colonies of white-to-dark gray mycelia formed on PDA, and were slightly brown on the underside of the colony. The hyphae were achromatic, branching, septate, and 4.59 (±1.38) μm in diameter on average. Perithecia were brown to black, globose in shape, and 275.9 to 379.3 × 245.3 to 344.8 μm. Asci that formed after 3 to 4 weeks in culture were eight-spored, clavate to cylindrical. The ascospores were fusiform, slightly curved, unicellular and hyaline, and 13.05 to 24.03 × 10.68 to 16.02 μm. PCR amplification was carried out by utilizing universal rDNA-ITS primer pair ITS4/ITS5 (2). Sequencing of the PCR products of DQ1 (GenBank Accession No. JN165746) revealed 99% similarity (100% coverage) with Colletotrichum gloeosporioides isolates (GenBank Accession No. FJ456938.1, No. EU326190.1, No. DQ682572.1, and No. AY423474.1). Phylogenetic analyses (MEGA 4.1) using the neighbor-joining (NJ) algorithm placed the isolate in a well-supported cluster (>90% bootstrap value based on 1,000 replicates) with other C. gloeosporioides isolates. The pathogen was identified as C. gloeosporioides (Penz.) Penz. & Sacc. (teleomorph Glomerella cingulata (Stoneman) Spauld & H. Schrenk) based on the morphological characteristics and rDNA-ITS sequence analysis (1). To confirm pathogenicity, Koch's postulates were performed on detached leaves of C. fargesii f. duciouxii, inoculated with a solution of 1.0 × 106 conidia per ml. Symptoms similar to the original ones started to appear after 10 days, while untreated leaves remained healthy. The inoculation assay used three leaves for untreated and six leaves for treated. The experiments were repeated once. C. gloeosporioides was consistently reisolated from the diseased tissue. C. gloeosporioides is distributed worldwide causing anthracnose on a wide variety of plants (3). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of C. gloeosporioides causing leaf spots on C. fargesii f. duciouxii in China. References: (1) B. C. Sutton. Page 1 in: Colletotrichum: Biology, Pathology and Control. CAB International. Wallingford, UK, 1992. (2) T. J. White et al. Page 315 in: PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, 1990. (3) J. Yan et al. Plant Dis. 95:880, 2011.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Li ◽  
Yishuo Huang ◽  
Yanxia Shi ◽  
A LI CHAI ◽  
Xuewen Xie ◽  
...  

Coriander (Coriandrum sativum L.) or Chinese parsley is a culinary herb with multiple medicinal effects that are widely used in cooking and traditional medicine. From September to November 2019, symptoms were observed in 2-month-old coriander plants from coriander fields in Lanzhou and Wenzhou, China. The disease developed rapidly under cold and wet climatic conditions, and the infection rate was almost 80% in open coriander fields. Typical symptoms on leaves included small, water-soaked blotches and irregular brown spots surrounding haloes; as the disease progressed, the spots coalesced into necrotic areas. Symptomatic leaf tissue was surface sterilized, macerated in sterile distilled water, and cultured on nutrient agar plates at 28 °C for 48 h (Koike and Bull, 2006). After incubation, six bacterial colonies, which were individually isolated from collected samples from two different areas, were selected for further study. Colonies on NA plate were small, round, raised, white to cream-colored, and had smooth margins. All bacterial isolates were gram-negative, rod-shaped and nonfluorescent on King's B medium. The bacteria were positive for levan production, Tween 80 hydrolysis, and tobacco hypersensitivity but negative for oxidase, potato slice rot test, arginine dihydrolase, ice nucleation activity, indole production and H2S production. The suspension of representative isolate for inoculating of plants was obtained from single colony on King's B medium for 2-3 days at 28 °C. DNA was extracted from bacterial suspensions of YS2003200102 cultured in 20 ml of King’s B medium broth at 28 °C for 1 day. Extraction was performed with a TIANamp Bacterial DNA Kit (TIANGEN, China) according to the manufacturer’s recommendations. The pathogen was confirmed by amplification and sequencing of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase A (gapA) gene, the citrate synthase (gltA) gene, the DNA gyrase B (gyrB) gene and the RNA polymerase sigma factor 70 (rpoD) gene using gapA-For/gapA-Rev, gltA-For/gltA-Rev, gyrB-For/gryB-Rev, rpoD-For/rpoD-Rev primers, respectively (Popović et al., 2019). The sequences of the PCR products were deposited in GenBank with accession numbers MZ681931 (gapA), MZ681932 (gltA), MZ681933 (gyrB), and MZ681934 (rpoD). Phylogenetic analysis of multiple genes (Xu and Miller, 2013) was conducted with the maximum likelihood method using MEGA7. The sequences of our isolates and ten published sequences of P. syringae pv. coriandricola were clustered into one clade with a 100% confidence level. To confirm the pathogenicity of isolate YS2003200102, 2-month-old healthy coriander plants were inoculated by spraying the leaves with a bacterial suspension (108 CFU ml−1) at 28 °C incubation temperature and 70% relative humidity condition, and sterile distilled water was applied as a negative control treatment (Cazorla et al. 2005). Three replicates were conducted for every isolate, and each replicate included 6 coriander plants. After twelve days, only the inoculated leaves with bacterial suspension showed bacterial leaf spot resembling those observed on naturally infected coriander leaves. Cultures re-isolated from symptomatic leaves showed the same morphological characteristics and molecular traits as those initially isolated from infected leaves in the field. This bacterium was previously reported causing leaf spot of coriander in India and Spain (Gupta et al. 2013; Cazorla et al. 2005). To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. syringae pv. coriandricola causing leaf spot disease on coriander in China. Studies are needed on strategies to manage P. syringae pv. coriandricola in crops, because its prevalence may cause yield loss on coriander in China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Lian Liu ◽  
Jian Rong Tang ◽  
Ya Li ◽  
Hong Kai Zhou

Wild rice (Oryza rufipogon) has been widely studied and cultivated in China in recent years due to its antioxidant activities and health-promoting effects. In December 2018, leaf spot disease on wild rice (O. rufipogon cv. Haihong-12) was observed in Zhanjiang (20.93 N, 109.79 E), China. The early symptom was small purple-brown lesions on the leaves. Then, the once-localized lesions coalesced into a larger lesion with a tan to brown necrotic center surrounded by a chlorotic halo. The diseased leaves eventually died. Disease incidence was higher than 30%. Twenty diseased leaves were collected from the fields. The margin of diseased tissues was cut into 2 × 2 mm2 pieces, surface-disinfected with 75% ethanol for 30 s and 2% sodium hypochlorite for 60 s, and then rinsed three times with sterile water before isolation. The tissues were plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium and incubated at 28 °C in the dark for 4 days. Pure cultures were produced by transferring hyphal tips to new PDA plates. Fifteen isolates were obtained. Two isolates (OrL-1 and OrL-2) were subjected to further morphological and molecular studies. The colonies of OrL-1 and OrL-1 on PDA were initially light gray, but it became dark gray with age. Conidiophores were single, straight to flexuous, multiseptate, and brown. Conidia were oblong, slightly curved, and light brown with four to nine septa, and measured 35.2–120.3 µm × 10.3–22.5 µm (n = 30). The morphological characteristics of OrL-1 and OrL-2 were consistent with the description on Bipolaris oryzae (Breda de Haan) Shoemaker (Manamgoda et al. 2014). The ITS region, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), and translation elongation factor (EF-1α) were amplified using primers ITS1/ITS4, GDF1gpp1/GDR1 gdp2 (Berbee et al. 1999), and EF-1α-F/EF-1α-R EF-1/EF-2 (O’Donnell 2000), respectively. Amplicons of OrL-1 and OrL-2 were sequenced and submitted to GenBank (accession nos. MN880261 and MN880262, MT027091 and MT027092, and MT027093 and MT027094). The sequences of the two isolates were 99.83%–100% identical to that of B. oryzae (accession nos. MF490854,MF490831,MF490810) in accordance with BLAST analysis. A phylogenetic tree was generated on the basis of concatenated data from the sequences of ITS, GAPDH, and EF-1α via Maximum Likelihood method, which clustered OrL-1 and OrL-2 with B. oryzae. The two isolates were determined as B. oryzae by combining morphological and molecular characteristics. Pathogenicity test was performed on OrL-1 in a greenhouse at 24 °C to 30 °C with 80% relative humidity. Rice (cv. Haihong-12) with 3 leaves was grown in 10 pots, with approximately 50 plants per pot. Five pots were inoculated by spraying a spore suspension (105 spores/mL) onto leaves until runoff occurred, and five pots were sprayed with sterile water and used as controls. The test was conducted three times. Disease symptoms were observed on leaves after 10 days, but the controls remained healthy. The morphological characteristics and ITS sequences of the fungal isolates re-isolated from the diseased leaves were identical to those of B. oryzae. B. oryzae has been confirmed to cause leaf spot on Oryza sativa (Barnwal et al. 2013), but as an endophyte has been reported in O. rufipogon (Wang et al. 2015).. Thus, this study is the first report of B. oryzae causing leaf spot in O. rufipogon in China. This disease has become a risk for cultivated wild rice with the expansion of cultivation areas. Thus, vigilance is required.


Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Li ◽  
Hui Pan ◽  
Lei Deng ◽  
Dandan Feng ◽  
Caihong Zhong

Broussonetia papyrifera (paper mulberry) is a deciduous tree with a number of uses and is native to northeastern Asia. Because of its fast-growing nature and high tolerance to dust, smoke, and high temperatures, paper mulberry is regarded as an important and economically-valuable component of a biologically diverse community and is used extensively in several areas including medicine, animal husbandry, paper making, weaving, afforestation and light industry (Mei et al. 2016). From June to August of 2019, symptoms on paper mulberry trees were observed in Shiniushan village, Sanhua town, Xishui County, Hubei province of China. Typical symptoms on leaves included small, angular, brown spots surrounded by yellow haloes. These spots coalesced into necrotic areas. The incidence was around 30%, which threatened the survival and reduced the yield of paper mulberry. In order to identify the causal pathogenic organism, leaf samples from 10 different infected trees were collected every two weeks and isolations made over three months. Several circular, flat, granulated colonies with entire margins were isolated on King’s B medium (KB). The biochemical and physiological characteristics of thirty typical strains were tested and listed as following: gram negative, aerobic, rod shaped, and non-fluorescent on King’s B medium; positive for carbohydrate utilization (sucrose, glucose, fructose and arabinose), levan production, hypersensitive on tobacco, potato and tomato; and negative for oxidase, arginine dehydrolase, tyrosinase and urease activity, gelatin liquefaction, and reduction of nitrate. Psa pathovar-specific primers PsaF1/PsaR2 (280bp product ) identified two representative strains as Psa (Rees-George et al. 2010). BLAST analysis further confirmed that the 16S rDNA region amplified by primers 27F/1492R (NCBI accession nos. MT472100 and MT472101) shared 99.84% and 99.77% identity with the Psa type strain ICMP 18884 (CP011972) respectively (Weisburg et al. 1991). For ten typical strains, pathogenicity was confirmed by spraying a bacterial suspension (108 cfu/mL) onto fifty one-year seedlings of B. papyrifera, five seedlings repetitions for each strain. Symptoms of infection similar to those observed initially in the field were detected within 7 days after incubation at 25°C with 80–85% humidity. No symptoms were observed on control plants. The pathogen was re-isolated from symptomatic leaves and re-identified as Psa by morphological characteristics and sequencing. To our knowledge, this is the first report of Psa causing bacterial leaf spot disease on B. papyrifera, China. Psa has been reported as a pathogen causing bacterial canker of kiwifruit worldwide, resulting in severe economic losses to kiwifruit growers (McCann & Li, 2017). As a host of Psa, B. papyrifera may be a source of inoculum for nearby kiwifruit orchards, and consequently effective control measures should be taken to manage this disease. Funding: This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31701974; 31901980), Science and technology program funded by Wuhan Science and Technology Bureau (2018020401011307). References: Mei et al. 2016. Eur J Plant Pathol. 145: 203. McCann & Li et al. 2017. Genome Biol Evol. 9: 932. Rees-George et al. 2010. Plant Pathol. 59: 453 Weisburg et al. 1991. J Bacteriol. 173: 697.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Lian Liu ◽  
Jian Rong Tang ◽  
Ya Li ◽  
Hong Kai Zhou

In recent years, wild rice (Oryza rufipogon Griff) has been widely cultivated because of its health-promoting effects. In May 2019, leaf spot lesions on cv. Haihong-12 were observed in Zhanjiang (20.93N, 109.79E), China. Leaf symptoms were yellow-to-brown, oval or circular with a very distinctive, large yellow halo. Black spores appeared on the leaves with advanced symptoms. The lesions coalesced, causing the entire leaf to become blighted and die. Disease incidence reached approximately 10% in the fields (8 ha) surveyed. Twenty leaves with symptoms were collected and cut into pieces of 2 ×2 cm in size. They were surface-disinfected with 75% ethanol for 30 s and 2% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) for 60 s, rinsed three times with sterile water, blotted dry on sterile paper, plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium, and incubated at 28°C in the dark for 4 days. Ten pure cultures were obtained by transferring hyphal tips to new PDA plates, and monosporic cultures were obtained from three isolates (Nos-1, Nos-2, and Nos-3). Those isolates exhibited very similar morphological characteristics on PDA. Colony of isolate Nos-1 was white at the early stage and became dark gray after 7 days. Conidia were produced from clusters of conidiophores, single celled, black, smooth, spherical, and 9.5 to 14.2 µm (average 10.6 µm ± 0.42) in diameter. Morphological characteristics of the isolates matched the description of Nigrospora oryzae Petch (Wang et al. 2017). The ITS region was amplified using primers ITS1 and ITS4 (White et al. 1990). Nucleotide sequences of isolates Nos-1, Nos-2, and Nos-3 deposited in GenBank under acc. nos. MW042173, MW042174, and MW042175, respectively, were 100% identical to N. oryzae (acc. nos. KX985944, KX985962; and KX986007). A phylogenetic tree generated based on the ITS sequences and using a Maximum Likelihood method with 1,000 bootstraps showed that these three isolates from wild rice were grouped with other N. oryzae isolates downloaded from GenBank (bootstrap = 100%) but away from other Nigrospora spp. Pathogenicity test was performed with these three isolates in a greenhouse at 24 to 30°C. Approximately 50 seedling of wild rice cv. Haihong-12 were grown in each pot. At the 3-leaf stage, plants in three pots were inoculated with each isolate by spraying a spore suspension (105 spores/ml) until runoff. Three pots sprayed with sterile water served as the controls. Each 3-pot treatment was separately covered with a plastic bag. The test was conducted three times. Diseased symptoms were observed on the inoculated leaves after 10 days while no disease was observed in the control plants. Morphological characteristics and the ITS sequences of fungal isolates re-isolated from the diseased leaves were identical to those of N. oryzae. N. oryzae has been reported to cause leaf spot on O. sativa (Wang et al. 2017), but not on O. rufipogon. Thus, this is the first report of N. oryzae causing leaf spot of O. rufipogon in China. The finding provides the information important for further studies to develop management strategies for control of this disease.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun-fei Mao ◽  
Li Jin ◽  
Huiyue Chen ◽  
Xiang-rong Zheng ◽  
Minjia Wang ◽  
...  

American sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua L.) is an important tree for landscaping and wood processing. In recent years, leaf spots on American sweetgum with disease incidence of about 53% were observed in about 1200 full grown plants in a field (about 8 ha) located in Pizhou, Jiangsu Province, China. Initially, dense reddish-brown spots appeared on both old and new leaves. Later, the spots expanded into dark brown lesions with yellow halos. Symptomatic leaf samples from different trees were collected and processed in the laboratory. For pathogen isolation, leaf sections (4×4mm) removed from the lesion margin were surface sterilized with 75% ethanol for 20s and then sterilized in 2% NaOCl for 30s, rinsed three times in sterile distilled water, incubated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25 °C in the darkness. After 5 days of cultivation, the pure culture was obtained by single spore separation. 6 isolate samples from different leaves named FXA1 to FXA6 shared nearly identical morphological features. The isolate FXA1 (codes CFCC 54675) was deposited in the China Center for Type Culture Collection. On the PDA, the colonies were light yellow with dense mycelium, rough margin, and reverse brownish yellow. Conidiophores (23–35 × 6–10 µm) (n=60) were solitary, straight to flexuous. Conidia (19–34 × 10–21 µm) (n=60) were single, muriform, oblong, mid to deep brown, with 1 to 6 transverse septa. These morphological characteristics resemble Stemphylium eturmiunum (Simmons 2001). Genomic DNA was extracted from mycelium following the CTAB method. The ITS region, gapdh, and cmdA genes were amplified and sequenced with the primers ITS5/ITS4 (Woudenberg et al. 2017), gpd1/gpd2 (Berbee et al. 1999), and CALDF1/CALDR2 (Lawrence et al. 2013), respectively. A maximum likelihood phylogenetic analysis based on ITS, gapdh and cmdA (accession nos. MT898502-MT898507, MT902342-MT902347, MT902336-MT902341) sequences using MEGA 7.0 revealed that the isolates were placed in the same clade as S. eturmiunum with 98% bootstrap support. All seedlings for pathogenicity tests were enclosed in plastic transparent incubators to maintain high relative humidity (90%-100%) and incubated in a greenhouse at 25°C with a 12-h photoperiod. For pathogenicity, the conidial suspension (105 spores/ml) of each isolate was sprayed respectively onto healthy leaves of L. styraciflua potted seedlings (2-year-old, 3 replicate plants per isolate). As a control, 3 seedlings were sprayed with sterile distilled water. After 7 days, dense reddish-brown spots were observed on all inoculated leaves. In another set of tests, healthy plants (3 leaves per plant, 3 replicate plants per isolate) were wound-inoculated with mycelial plugs (4×4mm) and inoculated with sterile PDA plugs as a control. After 7 days, brown lesions with light yellow halo were observed on all inoculation sites with the mycelial plugs. Controls remained asymptomatic in the entire experiment. The pathogen was reisolated from symptomatic tissues and identified as S. eturmiunum but was not recovered from the control. The experiment was repeated twice with the similar results, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. S. eturmiunum had been reported on tomato (Andersen et al. 2004), wheat (Poursafar et al. 2016), garlic (L. Fu et al. 2019) but not on woody plant leaves. To our knowledge, this is the first report of S. eturmiunum causing leaf spot on L. styraciflua in the world. This disease poses a potential threat to American sweetgum and wheat in Pizhou.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunlin Yang ◽  
Feng Liu ◽  
Qian Zeng ◽  
Xiulan Xu ◽  
Yicong Lv ◽  
...  

“Chuanzao 2” is a walnut variety derived from the hybridization of Juglans regia L. and J. sigillata Dode distributed in southwest China, where it is an economically important tree species in rural regions (Xiao et al. 2012). In April 2020, the variety in a walnut garden showed symptoms of brown leaf spot in Beishan Town (107°21′43.93″E, 31°28′12.34″N), Dazhou City in Sichuan, China, with 5% to 10% of leaves per plant affected (5 plants). Symptomatic leaves showed brown to dark brown spots (2 to 5 mm) with a dark brown to black halo and grayish-tan center. The spots were subcircular to irregular in shape, and gradually expanded and formed necrotic spots. A single conidium isolation was performed (Senanayake et al. 2020) and transferred to Potato Dextrose Agar (PDA). Five isolates were obtained from five different infected leaves. Colonies of five isolates were subcircular, erose or dentate, flat or effuse, white initially, gradually becoming yellowish with white margins, developed and fluffy aerial mycelia, and conidiogenensis was produced underneath mycelia after 25-days-incubation. Conidiogenous cells were subcylindrical to cylindrical, or irregular in shape, and hyaline. Macroconidia were lunate, reniform, hyaline, basal cell bluntly rounded, apical cell with acute end, 1-septate, rarely aseptate, sometimes slightly constricted at septum, basal cell equal or larger than apical cell, and measured 16.5 to 30.5 × 5 to 8.5 μm (mean = 23.2 × 6.3 μm, n = 50). Microconidia were not observed. These morphological characteristics resembled those of Ophiognomonia leptostyla (Fr.) Sogonov (Walker et al. 2012a). For molecular identification, genomic DNA (isolates SICAUCC 21-0008 and SICAUCC 21-0010) was extracted, and the internal transcribed spacers (ITS) region, guanine nucleotide-binding protein subunit beta (MS204) gene, and translation elongation factor 1-alpha (tef1-α) were amplified and sequenced by using the primers ITS5/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), E1F1/E5R1a (Walker et al. 2012a), and EF1-728F/EF1-1567R (Walker et al. 2012b), respectively. Phylogenetic analyses (maximum likelihood) based on a combined dataset showed 100% bootstrap support values in a clade with O. leptostyla. The sequences of ITS, MS204, and tef1-α genes were deposited in GenBank with accession numbers MW493111/MZ026300, MW495270/MZ031975, and MW495271/MZ031974, respectively. To fulfill Koch’s postulates, five healthy hybrid plants (2 to 3 years old) with 5 to 8 leaves per plant were spray inoculated with conidium suspensions (104 conidia/mL; isolate SICAUCC 21-0008) prepared from 40-days-old cultures onto the wounded sites via pin-prick inoculation. Similarly, five noninoculated plants sprayed with sterile water served as controls. Plants were placed in a growth chamber at 25℃ on a 12-h fluorescent light/dark regime and daily sprayed with sterile distilled water. After two weeks, observed symptoms were similar to those from natural infections. No disease symptoms were found on control plants. The fungus O. leptostyla was reisolated from the diseased leaves and characterized morphologically. O. leptostyla is a global pathogen and has been reported to cause the leaf spot in many walnut trees, viz. J. ailantifolia, J. californica, J. cinerea, and J. major, etc. To our knowledge, this is the first report of O. leptostyla causing brown leaf spot on Juglans hybrid (J. regia × J. sigillata) in China. The increasing risk of this pathogen in the walnut-growing areas of Sichuan Province of China needs a further exploration and outreach effort to develop effective control measures. Chunlin Yang, Feng Liu, and Qian Zeng contributed equally to this paper.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Zhou ◽  
Rou Ye ◽  
Qin Ying ◽  
Yang Zhang ◽  
Linping Zhang

Dalbergia hupeana is a kind of wood and medicinal tree widely distributed in southern China. Since 2019, a leaf spot disease was observed on the leaves of D. hupeana in Gangxia village, Luoting town in Jiangxi Province, China (28°52′53″N, 115°44′58″E). The disease incidence was estimated to be above 50%. The symptoms began as small spots that gradually expanded, developing a brown central and dark brown to black margin. The spots ranged from 4 to 6 mm in diameter. Leaf pieces (5 × 5 mm) from lesion margins were surface sterilized in 70% ethanol for 30 s followed by 2% NaOCl for 1 min and then rinsed three times with sterile water. Tissues were placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and incubated at 25°C. Pure cultures were obtained by monosporic isolation. Fifteen strains with similar morphological characterizations were isolated, and three representative isolates (JHT-1, JHT-2, and JHT-3) were chosen and used for further study. Colonies on PDA of three isolates were grayish-green with white edges and dark green on the reverse side. Conidia were transparent, cylindrical with rounded ends, and measured 3.6-5.3 µm × 9.5-15.2 µm (3.7 ± 0.2 × 13.6 ± 1.1 µm, n = 100). Appressoria were dark brown, globose or subcylindrical, and ranged from 6.2-9.2 µm× 5.1-6.8 µm (7.9 ± 0.4 × 5.9 ± 0.3 µm, n=100). The morphological characteristics of the three strains were consistent with the description of species in the Colletotrichum gloeosporioides complex (Weir et al. 2012). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions, actin (ACT), calmodulin (CAL), chitin synthase (CHS-1) and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and beta-tubulin 2 (TUB2) were amplified from genomic DNA for the three isolates using primers ITS1/ITS4, ACT-512F/ACT-783R, CL1/CL2, CHS-79F/CHS-345R, GDF/GDR and T1/Bt2b (Weir et al. 2012), respectively. The sequences were deposited in GenBank (Accession Nos. MZ482016 - MZ482018 for ITS; MZ463636 - MZ463638 for ACT; MZ463648- MZ463650 for CAL; MZ463639 - MZ463641 for CHS-1; MZ463642 - MZ463644 for GAPDH; MZ463645 - MZ463647 for TUB2). A neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree was constructed with MEGA 7.0 using the concatenation of multiple sequences (ITS, ACT, GAPDH, TUB2, CHS-1, CAL) (Kumar et al. 2016). According to the phylogenetic tree, three isolates fall within the Colletotrichum fructicola clade (boot support 99%). Based on morphological characteristics and phylogenetic analysis, three isolates were identified as C. fructicola. The pathogenicity of three isolates was conducted on two-yr-old seedlings (30 cm tall) of D. hupeana. Healthy leaves were wounded with a sterile needle and then inoculated with 10 μL spore suspension (106 conidia per mL). Controls were treated with sterile water. All plants were covered with transparent plastic bags and incubated in a greenhouse at 28°C with a 12 h photoperiod (relative humidity > 80%). Within five days, the inoculated leaves developed lesions similar to those observed in the field, whereas controls were asymptomatic. The experiments repeated three times showed similar results. The infection rate was 100%. C. fructicola was re-isolated from the lesions, whereas no fungus was isolated from control leaves. C. fructicola can cause leaf diseases in a variety of hosts, including Aesculus chinensis (Sun et al. 2020), Peucedanum praeruptorum (Ma et al. 2020), and Mandevilla × amabilis (Sun et al. 2020). C. brevisporum and C. gigasporum were also reported to infect Dalbergia odorifera (Chen et al. 2021; Wan et al. 2018). However, This is the first report of C. fructicola associated with leaf spot disease on D. hupeana in China. These results will help to develop effective strategies for appropriately managing this newly emerging disease.


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