scholarly journals First report of leaf spot disease caused by Stemphylium eturmiunum on garlic in Korea.

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walftor Dumin ◽  
Mi-Jeong Park ◽  
You-Kyoung Han ◽  
Yeong-Seok Bae ◽  
Jong-Han Park ◽  
...  

Garlic (Allium sativum L. cv.namdo) is one of the most popular vegetables grown in Korea due to its high demand from the food industry. However, garlic is susceptible to a wide range of pest infestations and diseases that cause a significant decrease in garlic production, locally and globally (Schwartz and Mohan 2008). In early 2019, the occurrence of leaf blight disease was found spreading in garlic cultivation areas around Jeonnam (34.9671107, 126.4531825) province, Korea. Disease occurrence was estimated to affect 20% of the garlic plants and resulted in up to a 3-5% decrease in its total production. At the early stage of infection, disease symptoms were manifested as small, white-greyish spots with the occurrence of apical necrosis on garlic leaves. This necrosis was observed to enlarge, producing a water-soaked lesion before turning into a black-violet due to the formation of conidia. As the disease progressed, the infected leaves wilted, and the whole garlic plants eventually died. To identify the causal agent, symptomatic tissues (brown dried water-soak lesion) were excised, surface sterilized with 1% NaOCl and placed on the Potato Dextrose Agar (PDA) followed by incubation at 25°C in the dark for 5 days. Among ten fungal isolates obtained, four were selected for further analyses. On PDA, fungal colonies were initially greyish white in colour but gradually turned to yellowish-brown after 15 days due to the formation of yellow pigments. Conidia were muriform, brown in colour, oblong (almost round) with an average size of 18 – 22 × 16 – 20 μm (n = 50) and possessed 6 - 8 transverse septa. Fungal mycelia were branched, septate, and with smooth-walled hyphae. Morphological characteristics described above were consistent with the morphology of Stemphylium eturmiunum as reported by Simmons (Simmons, 2001). For molecular identification, molecular markers i.e. internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and calmodulin (cmdA) genes from the selected isolates were amplified and sequenced (White et al., 1990; Carbone and Kohn 1999). Alignment analysis shows that ITS and cmdA genes sequence is 100% identical among the four selected isolates. Therefore, representative isolate i.e. NIHHS 19-142 (KCTC56750) was selected for further analysis. BLASTN analysis showed that ITS (MW800165) and cmdA (LC601938) sequences of the representative isolates were 100% identical (523/523 bp and 410/410 bp) to the reference genes in Stemphylium eturmiunum isolated from Allium sativum in India (KU850545, KU850835) respectively (Woudenberg et al. 2017). Phylogenetic analysis of the concatenated sequence of ITS and cmdA genes confirmed NIHHS 19-142 isolates is Stemphylium eturmiunum. Pathogenicity test was performed using fungal isolate representative, NIHHS 19-142. Conidia suspension (1 × 106 conidia/µL) of the fungal isolate was inoculated on intact garlic leaves (two leaves from ten different individual plants were inoculated) and bulbs (ten bulbs were used) respectively. Inoculation on intact leaves was performed at NIHHS trial farm whereas inoculated bulbs were kept in the closed container to maintain humidity above 90% and incubated in the incubator chamber at 25°C. Result show that the formation of water-soaked symptoms at the inoculated site was observed at 14 dpi on intact leaves whereas 11 dpi on bulbs. As a control, conidia suspension was replaced with sterile water and the result shows no symptoms were observed on the control leaves and bulbs respectively. Re-identification of fungal colonies from symptomatic leaf and bulb was attempted. Result showed that the morphological characteristics and molecular marker sequences of the three colonies selected were identical to the original isolates thus fulfilled Koch’s postulates. Early identification of Stemphylium eturmiunum as a causal agent to leaf spot disease is crucial information to employ effective disease management strategies or agrochemical applications to control disease outbreaks in the field. Although Stemphylium eturmiunum has been reported to cause leaf spot of garlic disease in China, France and India (Woudenberg et al. 2017), to our knowledge, this is the first report of causing leaf spot disease on garlic in Korea.

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Zhang ◽  
Guangqiang Li ◽  
Dou Yang ◽  
Ruoling Zhang ◽  
Songze Wan

Mu oil tree (Vernicia montana) is an economically important woody oil plant, which is widely distributed in southern China. In mid-May 2020, a leaf spot disease was observed on the leaves of mu oil tree in Taihe County in Jiangxi Province, China (26°55′25.55″N, 114°49′5.85″E). The disease incidence was estimated to be above 40%. Initial symptoms were circular red-brown spots which were 1-2 mm in diameter, then enlarged with red-brown center. In later stages, the spots coalesced and formed large patches, and subsequently red-brown centers of lesions gradually dried and fell out, forming a “shot hole” appearance. To identify the pathogen, diseased leaves were collected from Taihe County. Leaf tissues (5 × 5 mm) were cut from the margins of typical symptomatic lesions, surface- sterilized in 75% ethanol for 30 seconds and 3% sodium hypochlorite for 60 seconds, then rinsed with sterile distilled water three times. Leaf pieces were placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA; 1.5%, Difco-BD Diagnostics) and incubated at 25 °C in the dark. Pure cultures were obtained from individual conidia by recovering single spores. On PDA, colonies were initially white and cottony. The mycelia then became pinkish to deep-pink with time at the center on the front side and pink on the reverse side. Colonies produced pale orange conidial masses after 9 days. Conidia were fusiform with acute ends, smooth-walled, hyaline, and measured 3.6–5.5 × 8.1–14.5 µm (4.5 ± 0.5 × 10.6 ± 1.0 µm, n = 100). The morphological characteristics of the isolate matched the descriptions of Colletotrichum acutatum complex (Damm et al. 2012). For molecular identification, the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), chitin synthase (CHS-1), beta-tubulin 2 (TUB2), and actin (ACT) were sequenced using the primers ITS1/ITS4, GDF/GDR, CHS-79F/CHS-345R, T1/Bt2b, ACT-512F/ACT-783R, respectively (Weir et al. 2012). The obtained sequences were deposited into the GenBank [accession nos. MW584317 (ITS); MW656269 (GAPDH); MW656270 (TUB2); MW656268 (CHS-1); MW656267 (ACT)]. All the sequences showed 94 to 100% similarity with those of C. fioriniae. A neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree was generated by combining all the sequenced loci using MEGA7.0 (Kumar et al. 2016). The isolate TH-M4 clustered with C. fioriniae, having 99% bootstrap support. Base on the morphology and multi-gene phylogeny, isolate TH-M4 was identified as C. fioriniae (Damm et al. 2012). To confirm pathogenicity, 20 healthy leaves of 10 mu oil trees (3-year-old) grown outdoors were inoculated with a drop of spore suspension (106 conidia per mL) of the isolate TH-M4 in September 2020. Another 10 plants were inoculated with sterile water as the control. The leaves were wounded with a sterile toothpick. All the inoculated leaves were covered with black plastic bags to maintain humidity for 2 days. The pathogenicity test was repeated twice. The resulting symptoms were similar to those on the original infected plants, whereas the control leaves remained asymptomatic. The same fungus was re-isolated from the lesions on the inoculated plant, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. C. fioriniae has been recorded as anthracnose pathogen on Mahonia aquifolium (Garibaldi et al. 2020), Paeonia lactiflora (Park et al. 2020), Solanum melongena (Xu et al. 2020), and Juglans regia (Varjas et al. 2020). To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. fioriniae associated with leaf spot disease on mu oil tree in China. This study provided crucial information for epidemiologic studies and appropriate control strategies for this oil plant disease.


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 ◽  
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.


2010 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dean A. Glawe ◽  
Tess Barlow ◽  
Steven T. Koike

In the summer of 2009, a leaf spot disease occurred on 100% of Gaillardia × grandiflora cv. Goblin in a commercial nursery in coastal Monterey Co., CA. Nearly all of the affected plants were unsalable. The causal agent was determined to be Entyloma gaillardianum based on morphological features, host, and ITS region. This species has not been reported previously from this host in North America. Accepted for publication 16 March 2010. Published 28 April 2010.


Plant Disease ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 99 (2) ◽  
pp. 289-289 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Z. Zhu ◽  
W. J. Liao ◽  
D. X. Zou ◽  
Y. J. Wu ◽  
Y. Zhou

In May 2014, a severe leaf spot disease was observed on walnut tree (Juglans regia L.) in Hechi, Guangxi, China. Leaf spots were circular to semicircular in shape, water-soaked, later becoming grayish white in the center with a dark brown margin and bordered by a tan halo. Necrotic lesions were approximately 3 to 4 mm in diameter. Diseased leaves were collected from 10 trees in each of five commercial orchards. The diseased leaves were cut into 5 × 5 mm slices, dipped in 75% ethanol for 30 s, washed three times in sterilized water, sterilized with 0.1% (w/v) HgCl2 for 3 min, and then rinsed five times with sterile distilled water. These slices were placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA), followed by incubating at 28°C for about 3 to 4 days. Fungal isolates were obtained from these diseased tissues, transferred onto PDA plates, and incubated at 28°C. These isolates produced gray aerial mycelium and then became pinkish gray with age. Moreover, the reverse of the colony was pink. The growth rate was 8.21 to 8.41 mm per day (average = 8.29 ± 0.11, n = 3) at 28°C. The colonies produced pale orange conidial masses and were fusiform with acute ends, hyaline, sometimes guttulate, 4.02 to 5.25 × 13.71 to 15.72 μm (average = 4.56 ± 0.31 × 14.87 ± 1.14 μm, n = 25). The morphological characteristics and measurements of this fungal isolate matched the previous descriptions of Colletotrichum fioriniae (Marcelino & Gouli) R.G. Shivas & Y.P. Tan (2). Meanwhile, these characterizations were further confirmed by analysis of the partial sequence of five genes: the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) of the ribosomal DNA, beta-tubulin (β-tub) gene, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) gene, chitin synthase 3(CHS-1) gene, and actin (ACT) gene, with universal primers ITS4/ITS5, T1/βt2b, GDF1/GDR1, CHS1-79F/CHS1-354R, and ACT-512F/ACT-783R, respectively (1). BLAST of these DNA sequences using the nucleotide database of GenBank showed a high identify (ITS, 99%; β-tub, 99%; GAPDH, 99%; CHS-1, 99%; and ACT, 100%) with the previously deposited sequences of C. fioriniae (ITS, KF278459.1, NR111747.1; β-tub, AB744079.1, AB690809.1; GAPDH, KF944355.1, KF944354.1; CHS-1, JQ948987.1, JQ949005.1; and ACT, JQ949625.1, JQ949626.1). Koch's postulates were fulfilled by inoculating six healthy 1-year-old walnut trees in July 2014 with maximum and minimum temperatures of 33 and 26°C. The 6-mm mycelial plug, which was cut from the margin of a 5-day-old colony of the fungus on PDA, was placed onto each pin-wounded leaf, ensuring good contact between the mycelium and the wound. Non-colonized PDA plugs were placed onto pin-wounds as negative controls. Following inoculation, both inoculated and control plants were covered with plastic bags. Leaf spots, similar to those on naturally infected plants, were observed on the leaves inoculated with C. fioriniae within 5 days. No symptoms were observed on the negative control leaves. Finally, C. fioriniae was re-isolated from symptomatic leaves; in contrast, no fungus was isolated from the control, which confirmed Koch's postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf disease on walnut caused by C. fioriniae. References: (1) L. Cai et al. Fungal Divers. 39:183, 2009. (2) R. G. Shivas and Y. P. Tan. Fungal Divers. 39:111, 2009.


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 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang Liu ◽  
Fengying Luo ◽  
Tianhui Zhu ◽  
Shan Han ◽  
Shujiang Li

Zanthoxylum schinifolium Sieb. et Zucc, a species of prickly ash, is one of the main economic plants in China and mainly grown in Southwest China. The planting area of Z. schinifolium accounts for more than 70% of the total area of prickly ash, and one of the largest plantings of Z. schinifolium is located in Jianyang City (Sichuan) with the area of 6.67 km2. Since 2018, Z. schinifolium, located in Jianyang City, have developed leaf spot disease, with approximately 50% showing disease symptoms. At the beginning of the occurrence, yellow-brown lesions formed on the leaves; in the later stages, the area of the lesions expanded. At the severe stage, multiple lesions merged into one large, dead spot, and the plants failed to blossom and bear fruit. The samples were collected from typical symptoms of Z. schinifolium leaves in Jianyang City. A total of 20 leaf samples were collected from 5 Z. schinifolium plants (4 leaves per plant), and were cut into small pieces of 2 × 2mm at the junction of infected and healthy tissues. These tissues were surface-disinfested for 30 s in 3% sodium hypochlorite and the for 60 s in 75% ethanol, rinsed three times in sterile water, placed onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) amended with streptomycin sulfate (50 µg/ml), and incubated in a dark incubator at 25°C. Morphological observation was performed on 18 recovered isolates, 15 of which were described as Pestalotiopsis sp. The colonies were incubated on PDA at 25°C for 7 days and reached a diameter of 80-90 mm. The colonies were white with undulating edges and were similar in colors on the reverse side. After colony culture at 25°C for 10 days, gregarious black conidiomata were scattered on the mycelial mats. The conidia and appendages of the samples were measured by Leica Application Suite X 3.4.1.17822 (20 conidia per isolate), and the sizes of which were consistent with the description from Maharachchikumbura et al. Based on morphological observations, the isolates were identified as Pestalotiopsis kenyana Maharachch., K.D. Hyde & Crous. PCR was performed with primers ITS1/ITS4 for the ITS region, primers D1/D2 for the large subunit ribosomal RNA gene (LSU), primers 5f2/7cr for the RNA polymerase II second largest subunit (RPB2), primers Bt2a/Bt2b for the β-tubulin gene (TUB), and primers EF1-526F/EF2-567R for the translation elongation factor 1-alpha gene (TEF). The Sanger-sequenced PCR products were sequenced and blasted in GenBank, and the sequences showed that ITS: 99.17% (594 out of 599 bp), LSU: 100% (909 out of 909 bp), RPB2: 99.17% (832 out of 832 bp), TUB: 100% (774 out of 774 bp), TEF: 100% (485 out of 485 bp) with the type specimen of P. kenyana CBS 442.67 (ITS: GenBank accession NR147549.1, LSU: MH870724.1, PRB2: MH554958.1, TUB: KM199395.1, TEF: KM199502.1). Representative sequences were deposited in GenBank (ITS: MT509798; LSU: MT509800; RPB2: MT522448; TUB: MT522450; TEF: MT522449). To fulfill Koch's postulates, leaves on fifteen one-year-old healthy potted Z. schinifolium plants were sterilized by 75% ethanol cotton balls, and were rinsed by sterile water for three times. Then each leaf was punctured with sterile needles for two wounds (five leaves per plant). The wounds were inoculated by placing 8 mm mycelial plugs obtained from the periphery of 7-day-old single-spore cultures. An equal number of plants were wounded with the same method, and were respectively inoculated with sterile water and PDA plugs without mycelium as controls. All plants were placed in a growth chamber at 25°C under 90% relative humidity. After 7 days, all mycelial-inoculated leaves of the plants showed symptoms identical to those described above, whereas the control plants remained symptom free. P. kenyana was re-isolated from the infected leaves and confirmed to be the same as the inoculated pathogen through analyses of morphological characteristics and molecular techniques. The pathogenicity test was repeated three times with similar results. To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. kenyana as a causal agent of leaf spot disease on Z. schinifolium in China. These findings will aid the development of better preventive measures in accordance with the emergence of this new pathogen.


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.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hai feng Sun ◽  
Ming yu Wei ◽  
Na Li ◽  
Yu Yan

Menispermum dauricum DC. is an ornamental plant used in traditional Chinese medicine. (Tang et al. 1992). In September 2019, a leaf spot on M. dauricum DC. was first found in a medicinal plant plantation in Harbin city (45.80°N, 126.53°E), Heilongjiang Province, China. The incidence was 76-90% on the 0.02 ha plantation. The initial symptoms were irregular black and brown spots on the leaves. The lesions expanded and coalesced, eventually leading to blight. Fresh leaf samples from ten M. dauricum plants with typical symptoms were collected. The areas of leaf between symptomatic and healthy tissue (5㎜×5㎜) were cut and surface disinfeated in 75% ethanol for 2 min, and with 1% HgCl2 for 1 min, and then rinsed three times with sterile water. Small lesion pieces were incubated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) for 7 days at 25℃, in the dark. Ten fungal isolates were obtained and transferred onto new PDA and potato carrot agar (PCA) plates to establish pure cultures. After 8 days, the colonies on PDA were 75-86㎜ in diameter, circular, with distinct concentric rings and a whitish aerial-mycelium margin, cottony, light gray to dark bluish brown. The colonies on the PCA were olive-green and bordered by white aerial hyphae. A total of 150 conidia were single or in short chains, obclavate, oval or inverted pear, light brown to brown, smooth or slightly spiny, with 1 to 6 transverse septa, 0 to 4 longitudinal or oblique septa, not narrow or slightly narrowed at the separation, 22.5-42.5×7.5-15.5㎛, and rostrate. Conidiophores were simple, erect, or ascending, dark brown, geniculate, septate, and with one or several conidial scars, 32.5-77.5×3.0-5.0㎛. Beaks were columnar or conical, 7.5-22.5×2.5-3.5㎛. Morphologically, all ten isolates were most similar to Alternaria alternata (Simmons 2007). For further identification of the fungus at the molecular level, internal transcribed spacer rDNA regions (ITS), RNA polymerase second largest subunit gene (RPB2) and Alternaria major allergen (Alt a 1) were amplified and sequenced using the primers ITS1 and ITS4, RPB2-5F2 and RPB2-7CR, Alt-for and Alt-rev (Woudenberg et al. 2015). The resulting sequences were deposited in GenBank (ITS: MT995193, MZ150794, RPB2: MT999483, MZ170963, Alt a 1: MT802122, MZ170962). BLAST search of these sequences showed 99%-100% homology with the ITS (FJ196306), RPB2 (KC584375) and Alt a 1 (KT315515) of the type strain CBS 916.96 of A. alternata, respectively. Thus, the fungus was identified as A. alternata based on the morphology and molecular analysis. For the pathogenicity test, spore suspensions (1×106 spores/mL) of the representative isolates BFG001 and BFG002 were sprayed onto the leaves of six healthy plants, separately. As a control, six plants were treated with sterile distilled water. The plants used in the experiment were covered with plastic bags and incubated at 25℃ for 10 days. Eight days after inoculation, irregular, slightly sunken black leaf spots appeared at the leaf margin. The experiment was repeated three times with the same method. The same fungus was successfully re-isolated from the leaves of the inoculated plants, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. No symptoms were observed on control plants. To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf spot disease on M. dauricum DC. caused by A. alternata in the world. The appearance of leaf spot disease reduces the yield and quality of Chinese medicinal materials. This report has laid the foundation for the further research and control of leaf spot disease.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wang Hanyi ◽  
Hou Xiuming ◽  
Xueming Huang ◽  
Meng Gao ◽  
Tingting Chen ◽  
...  

Bletilla striata (Thunb.) Rchb. f. (Orchidaceae family, known as Baiji in Chinese) is a perennial herb and has been traditionally used for hemostasis and detumescence in China. In April of 2020, a leaf spot disease on B. striata was observed in plant nurseries (∼0.2 h) in Guilin, Guangxi Province, China. Approximately 20% of the plants were symptomatic, of which 150 plants were randomly selected for investigation. Initial symptoms include the appearance of small, circular or irregular light brown spots, randomly scattered on the edges and surfaces of the leaves, which progressively expand into large, suborbicular or irregular-shaped dark brown, necrotic areas. At the severe stage, the lesions coalesced into large necrotic areas and ultimately resulted in leaf abscission. To isolate the pathogen, three representative plants exhibiting symptoms were collected from the nurseries. Leaf tissues (5 × 5 mm) were cut from the margin of necrotic lesions (n = 18), surface-disinfected in 1% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) solution for 2 min, then rinsed three times in sterile water before isolation. The tissues were plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium, and incubated at 28°C (12-h photoperiod) for 3 days. Hyphal tips from recently germinated spores were transferred to PDA to obtain pure cultures. Nine fungal isolates with similar morphological characteristics were obtained. Three single-spore isolates, BJ23.1, BJ55.1, and BJ91.3, were subjected to further morphological and molecular characterisation. Colonies on PDA plates were villose, had a dense growth of aerial mycelia and appeared white (1A1) to yellowish white (3A2). Macroconidia were smooth, hyaline, straight to slightly curved, usually contained three or five septa, and measuring 23.3 to 42.1 × 3.0 to 6.2 μm (mean ± SD: 31.2 ± 5.1 × 4.2 ± 0.6 μm, n = 50). Microconidia were generally cylindrical, straight to slightly curved, aseptate, and measuring 7.2 to 18.8 × 2.5 to 4.3 μm (mean ± SD: 12.1 ± 2.8 × 3.3 ± 0.5 μm, n = 62). Morphological characteristics are similar to those of F. commune (Skovgaard et al. 2003). For molecular identification, the genomic DNA of the isolates BJ23.1, BJ55.1, and BJ91.3 were extracted using the CTAB method (Guo et al. 2000). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA, partial translation elongation factor-1 alpha (TEF-1α), RNA polymerase second largest subunit (RPB2), and the mitochondrial small subunit rDNA (mtSSU) genes were amplified using primer pairs [ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), EF-1/EF-2 (O’Donnell et al. 1998), and 5f2/11ar (Liu et al. 1999, Reeb et al. 2004), MS1/MS2 (Li et al. 1994), respectively]. The obtained sequences were deposited in NCBI GenBank under the following accession numbers: ITS (MZ424697 to MZ424699), TEF-1α (MZ513467 to MZ513469), RPB2 (MZ513473 to MZ513475), and mtSSU (MZ513470 to MZ513472). BLAST® analysis of the deposited sequences showed 99 to 100% identity with those of F. commune present in GenBank (Accession numbers: DQ016205, MH582348, MH582181, AF077383). In addition, a phylogenetic analysis using concatenated sequences of ITS, TEF-1α, mtSSU genes showed that BJ23.1, BJ55.1, and BJ91.3 located on the same clade with strains of F. commune. Therefore, based on morphological and molecular characteristics, the isolates were identified as F. commune (Skovgaard et al. 2003, Stewart et al. 2006). Pathogenicity was tested using 1.5-year-old B. striata plants. Healthy leaves on plants were inoculated with 5 × 5 mm mycelial discs of strains BJ23.1, BJ55.1, and BJ91.3 from 3-day-old PDA cultures, each isolate was inoculated onto three plants; three other plants inoculated with sterile PDA discs served as controls. All plants were enclosed in transparent plastic bags and incubated in a greenhouse at 28°C for 14 days (12-h photoperiod). Three days post-inoculation, leaf spot symptoms appeared on the inoculated leaves. No symptoms were detected on control plants. Experiments were replicated three times with similar results. To fulfill Koch’s postulates, F. commune was consistently re-isolated from symptomatic tissue and confirmed by morphology and sequencing, whereas no fungus was isolated from the control plants. F. commune has been reported to cause diseases on some plants, including sugarcane (Wang et al. 2018), maize (Xi et al. 2019) and Wax Gourd (Zeng et al. 2020). To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. commune causing leaf spot disease on B. striata in China. Identification of this pathogen provides the information for further studies to develop management strategies to control the disease.


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