scholarly journals First Report of Colletotrichum aenigma Causing Anthracnose of Grape in Korea

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ju Sung Kim ◽  
Oliul Hassan ◽  
Taehyun Chang

Grape (cv. Kyoho) is one of the most popular dessert fruits in South Korea. Anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum species is a common and very destructive disease of grape in the country. In 2019, severe outbreaks of anthracnose was observed in different grape orchards in Gimcheon (36º09´N, 128º00´ E), South Korea. The disease incidence on fruit was up to 50% in the orchards with most severe outbreaks and infected fruit displayed typical anthracnose symptoms including sunken necrotic lesions with orange-like conidial mass. For isolation of putative causal agents, nine diseased fruits were collected from three commercial orchards. A total of nineisolates were made from nine of the infected fruit by spreading spore masses (1x106 conidia mL-1) from each fruit on water agar and collecting single germinated spores after incubation at 25 ºC overnigh. The single germinated spores were transferred on to fresh potato dextrose agar (PDA) (Difco, Becton Dickinson) and incubated at 25ºC in the dark. Seven day old colonies were cottony white on the upper side and gray at the center on the reverse side. Conidia were cylindrical with round ends and measured 13.9 – 20.1 × 5.4 – 8.1 μm (mean = 16.5 × 6.6 μm, n = 30). Appressoria were brownish, sub-cylindrical with a few lobes and 10.3 –16.7 × 6.6 – 10.9 μm (mean = 13.1 × 8.1 μm, n = 30). The morphological characteristics of the solates resembled those of Colletotrichum species within the C. gloeosporioides complex (Weir et al. 2012). DNA was amplified using the following primer pairs: ITS1/ITS4, GDF / GDR, ACT-512F / ACT-783R, Bt2a/ Bt2b, and CHS79-F/CHS-354R (Weir et al. 2012). Accession numbers, LC586811 to LC586825 were obtained after depositing all the resulting sequences in GenBank. A 50% majority rules phylogenetic tree (Bayesian phylogenic analysis) was constructed based on concatenated sequences of ITS, GAPDH, ACT, TUB, and CHS using MrBayes 3.2.10. The present isolates formed a single clade with the reference isolates of C. aenigma (isolate ICMP 18608 and ICMP 18686). For a pathogenicity test, healthy grapefruits were collected from an orchards, surface sterilized by dipping in 1% sodium hypochlorite, rinsed with sterilized water and dried by blotting. A conidial suspension (1×106 conidia mL-1) in sterilized water were prepared from one week old colonies of isolates GRAP10 and GRAP12. A small wound was made on sterilized detached fruit by punching with a sterile pin. A drop of the conidial suspension was placed on the wound, while the control fruit received a drop of sterile water. Similarly, unwounded fruit were also inoculated with a single droplet of conidial suspension. For each isolate and method (wounded and unwounded), ten fruit were inoculated, and ten non-inoculated fruit were used as control. All the treated fruit were kept in a plastic box containing moist tissue and incubated at 25º C in the dark. Typical anthracnose lesions appeared on all inoculated wounded fruit while non-inoculated and inoculated unwounded fruits remained asymptotic. Koch postulates were fulfilled by re-isolating and re-identifying the causal agent from inoculated fruit. Colletotrichum aenigma has been reported as the causal agent of anthracnose on Juglans regia, Camellia sinensis and Actinidia arguta in China (Weir et al. 2012; Wang et al. 2016; Wang et al. 2018). Previous studies reported four Colletotrichum species (C. acutatum, C. gloeosporioides, C. fructicola, and C. viniferum) to cause this disease on grapes in South Korea (Oo and Oh 2017; Lim et al. 2020). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on grape anthracnose caused by C. aenigma in South Korea. This finding may help to take effective control measures of this disease.

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliul Hassan ◽  
Taehyun Chang

In South Korea, ovate-leaf atractylodes (OLA) (Atractylodes ovata) is cultivated for herbal medicine. During May to June 2019, a disease with damping off symptoms on OLA seedlings were observed at three farmer fields in Mungyeong, South Korea. Disease incidence was estimated as approximately 20% based on calculating the proportion of symptomatic seedlings in three randomly selected fields. Six randomly selected seedlings (two from each field) showing damping off symptoms were collected. Small pieces (1 cm2) were cut from infected roots, surface-sterilized (1 minute in 0.5% sodium hypochlorite), rinsed twice with sterile water, air-dried and then plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA, Difco, and Becton Dickinson). Hyphal tips were excised and transferred to fresh PDA. Six morphologically similar isolates were obtained from six samples. Seven-day-old colonies, incubated at 25 °C in the dark on PDA, were whitish with light purple mycelia on the upper side and white with light purple at the center on the reverse side. Macroconidia were 3–5 septate, curved, both ends were pointed, and were 19.8–36.62 × 3.3–4.7 µm (n= 30). Microconidia were cylindrical or ellipsoid and 5.5–11.6 × 2.5–3.8 µm (n=30). Chlamydospores were globose and 9.6 –16.3 × 9.4 – 15.0 µm (n=30). The morphological characteristics of present isolates were comparable with that of Fusarium species (Maryani et al. 2019). Genomic DNA was extracted from 4 days old cultures of each isolate of SRRM 4.2, SRRH3, and SRRH5, EF-1α and rpb2 region were amplified using EF792 + EF829, and RPB2-5f2 + RPB2-7cr primer sets, respectively (Carbone and Kohn, 1999; O'Donnell et al. 2010) and sequenced (GenBank accession number: LC569791- LC569793 and LC600806- LC600808). BLAST query against Fusarium loci sampled and multilocus sequence typing database revealed that 99–100% identity to corresponding sequences of the F. oxysporum species complex (strain NRRL 28395 and 26379). Maximum likelihood phylogenetic analysis with MEGA v. 6.0 using the concatenated sequencing data for EF-1α and rpb2 showed that the isolates belonged to F. oxysporum species complex. Each three healthy seedlings with similar sized (big flower sabju) were grown for 20 days in a plastic pot containing autoclaved peat soil was used for pathogenicity tests. Conidial suspensions (106 conidia mL−1) of 20 days old colonies per isolate (two isolates) were prepared in sterile water. Three pots per strain were inoculated either by pouring 50 ml of the conidial suspension or by the same quantity of sterile distilled water as control. After inoculation, all pots were incubated at 25 °C with a 16-hour light/8-hour dark cycle in a growth chamber. This experiment repeated twice. Inoculated seedlings were watered twice a week. Approximately 60% of the inoculated seedlings per strain wilted after 15 days of inoculation and control seedlings remained asymptomatic. Fusarium oxysporum was successfully isolated from infected seedling and identified based on morphology and EF-1α sequences data to confirm Koch’s postulates. Fusarium oxysporum is responsible for damping-off of many plant species, including larch, tomato, melon, bean, banana, cotton, chickpea, and Arabidopsis thaliana (Fourie et al. 2011; Hassan et al.2019). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on damping-off of ovate-leaf atractylodes caused by F. oxysporum in South Korea. This finding provides a basis for studying the epidemic and management of the disease.


Plant Disease ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 95 (6) ◽  
pp. 775-775 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Ayala-Escobar ◽  
V. Santiago-Santiago ◽  
A. Madariaga-Navarrete ◽  
A. Castañeda-Vildozola ◽  
C. Nava-Diaz

Bougainvillea (Bougainvillea spectabilis Willd) growing in 28 gardens during 2009 showed 100% disease incidence and 3 to 7% disease severity. Bougainvilleas with white flowers were the most affected. Symptoms consisted of light brown spots with dark brown margins visible on adaxial and abaxial sides of the leaves. Spots were circular, 2 to 7 mm in diameter, often surrounded by a chlorotic halo, and delimited by major leaf veins. Single-spore cultures were incubated at 24°C under near UV light for 7 days to obtain conidia. Pathogenicity was confirmed by spraying a conidial suspension (1 × 104 spores/ml) on leaves of potted bougainvillea plants (white, red, yellow, and purple flowers), incubating the plants in a dew chamber for 48 h and maintaining them in a greenhouse (20 to 24°C). Identical symptoms to those observed at the residential gardens appeared on inoculated plants after 45 to 60 days. The fungus was reisolated from inoculated plants that showed typical symptoms. No symptoms developed on control plants treated with sterile distilled water. The fungus produced distinct stromata that were dark brown, spherical to irregular, and 20 to 24 μm in diameter. Conidiophores were simple, born from the stromata, loose to dense fascicles, brown, straight to curved, not branched, zero to two septate, 14 × 2 μm, with two to four conspicuous and darkened scars. The conidia formed singly, were brown, broad, ellipsoid, obclavate, straight to curved with three to four septa, 40 × 4 μm, and finely verrucous with thick hilum at the end. Fungal DNA from the single-spore cultures was obtained using a commercial DNA Extraction Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA); ribosomal DNA was amplified with ITS5 and ITS4 primers and sequenced. The sequence was deposited at the National Center for Biotechnology Information Database (GenBank Accession Nos. HQ231216 and HQ231217). The symptoms (4), morphological characteristics (1,2,4), and pathogenicity test confirm the identity of the fungus as Passalora bougainvilleae (Muntañola) Castañeda & Braun (= Cercosporidium bougainvilleae Muntañola). This pathogen has been reported from Argentina, Brazil, Brunei, China, Cuba, El Salvador, India, Indonesia, Jamaica, Japan, Thailand, the United States, and Venezuela (3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of this disease on B. spectabilis Willd in Mexico. P. bougainvilleae may become an important disease of bougainvillea plants in tropical and subtropical areas of Mexico. References: (1) U. Braun and R. R. Castañeda. Cryptogam. Bot. 2/3:289, 1991. (2) M. B. Ellis. More Dematiaceous Hypomycetes. Commonwealth Mycological Institute, Kew, Surrey, UK, 1976. (3) C. Nakashima et al. Fungal Divers. 26:257, 2007. (4) K. L. Nechet and B. A. Halfeld-Vieira. Acta Amazonica 38:585, 2008.


Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliul Hassan ◽  
Taehyun Chang

Ovate-leaf Atractylodes (Atractylodes ovata) is a well-known medicinal plant in Korea, where the dried rhizome and the root extract are used in herbal medicines. In 2019, severe damping-off of ovate-leaf Atractylodes at the early seedling stage was observed in a commercial planting in Sangju, South Korea. Approximately 35% of young seedlings suddenly wilted and then died despite adequate soil moisture. Putative causal agents were isolated from roots of diseased plants. Roots were washed thoroughly wih tap water, cut into 1-cm-long pieces and then split in half longitudinally. Root pieces were surface disinfected in 0.1% NaOCl solution for 1 min, washed three times with sterilized distilled water, and finally blotted dry. Root tissue was placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA, Difco, and Becton Dickinson) amended with tetracycline (0.05 g/L) and incubated at 25°C in the dark. Twelve pure culture of the potential causal agent were obtained by hyphal tipping twice. Mycelia of the seven-day-cultures were white and the colony produced numerous oogonia. The oogonia were smooth, globose, terminal and rarely intercalary, and 17.3 to 27.1 µm (mean ± SD 24.3 ± 2.25 µm) in diameter. Antheridia were diclinous or monoclinous (rare) with clavate cells that were 17.9 to 31.6 × 7.1 to 8.8 µm (mean 26.8 × 7.5 µm). The stalks of the antheridia were unbranched. Oospores were plerotic or nearly plerotic and 16.3 to 25.4 µm (mean ± SD = 20.1 µm ± 3.2) in diameter. The morphological characteristics of the isolates were comparable to those of Pythium spp. including P. aphanidermatum (Van der Plaats-Niterink,1981). The internal transcribed spacers (ITS), cytochrome oxidase 1 (cox1), and cytochrome oxidase 2 (cox2) regions of genomic DNA from SRRS1, SRRS2, and SRRS4 were amplified using primer sets ITS5 + ITS4, FM52R + FM55, and FM58 + FM66 respectively (Ueta and Tojo 2016) and sequenced. Resulting sequences were deposited in GenBank under accession numbers LC569777 to LC569779 and LC569785 to LC569790. The concatenated sequence data contained 46 taxa for the ITS–cox2 phylogenetic analysis and 17 taxa for cox1. The maximum likelihood estimation and Bayesian inference consensus tree showed that the present isolates formed a clade with P. aphanidermatum (strain NBRC 100101, P36-3, and 1987-61). The pathogenicity of three isolates was tested using the procedure described by Herrero et al. (2003) with some modification. Five surface disinfected seeds were sown in a plastic pot containing autoclaved peat soil. There was a total of twelve pots. After emergence seedlings were thinned to three similar sized seedlings per pot and grown for 25 days at 25°C in the 16‐h light. Seedling were then inoculated with mycelial plugs (10 mm diam.) from four day old cultures on PDA. Three plugs per pot were placed 1 cm apart from the seedlings (one plug per seedling). Three pots per isolates were inoculated and three pot with non‐inoculated seedlings were used as control. All plants were grown in a growth chamber at 25°C with 16‐h light and 80% relative humidity and irrigated twice per week with sterile water. All inoculated seedlings (100%) suddenly collapsed 10 days after inoculation while the control plants remained healthy and vigorous. Pythium aphanidermatum was re-isolated from the inoculated seedlings and identified following the procedures previously described thus completing Koch’s postulates. This pathogen has also reported as the causal agent of damping-off of common bean, cucumber, wheat, tomato and tobacco (Al-Saadi et al. 2007; Herrero et al. 2003; and Gilardi et al. 2018). To our knowledge, this is the first report of Pythium aphanidermatum causing damping-off disease on ovate-leaf Atractylodes in South Korea, and this pathogen could threaten production. Outcomes of present study will help manage this disease with effective control measures.


Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Na Zhao ◽  
Junyu Yang ◽  
Xiaoli Fang ◽  
lingrui Li ◽  
Hongfei Yan ◽  
...  

Naked oats (Avena nuda L.) is rich in protein, fat, vitamin, mineral elements and so on, and is one of the world's recognized cereal crops with the highest nutritional and healthcare value. In July 2019, leaf spot was detected on A. nuda in Zhangbei experimental station of Hebei Agricultural University. The incidence of disease is 10% to 20%. The symptoms were similar to anthracnose disease, the infected leaves had fusiform or nearly fusiform yellowish-brown spots, yellow halo around the spots. Numerous acervuli with black setae diagnostic of fungi in the genus Colletotrichum were present on necrotic lesions. To identify the pathogen, ten symptomatic leaves were collected, and only one disease spot was isolated from each leaf. Small square leaf pieces (3 to 5 mm) were excised from the junction of diseased and healthy tissues with a sterile scalpel and surface disinfested with 75% alcohol for 30s, 0.1% corrosive sublimate for 1 min, rinsed three times in sterile water. Plant tissues were then transferred on potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated at 25°C for 7 days. Two fungal isolates were obtained and purified by single-spore isolation method. All fungi have the same morphology and no other fungi were isolated. The aerial mycelium was gray black. The conidia were colorless and transparent, falcate, slightly curved, tapered toward the tips, and produced in acervuli with brown setae. The length and width of 100 conidia were measured and size ranged from 1.86 to 3.84 × 8.62 to 29.81 μm. These morphological characteristics were consistent with the description of Colletotrichum cereale (Crouch et al. 2006). To further assess the identity of the species, the genomic DNA of two fungal isolates (LYM19-4 and LYM19-10) was extracted by a CTAB protocol. The ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region as well as, the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), actin (ACT), and the beta-tubulin 2 (Tub2) partial genes were amplified and sequenced with primers ITS4/5, GDF/GDR, ACT-512F/ACT-783R, and T1/Bt2b, respectively (Carbone et al. 1999; Templeton et al. 1992; O'Donnell et al. 1997; Glass et al. 1995). The sequences of the ITS-rDNA region (MW040121, MW040122), the GAPDH sequences (MW052554, MW052555), the ACT sequences (MW052556, MW052551) and the Tub2 sequences (MW052552, MW052553) of the two single-spore isolates were more than 99% identical to C. cereale isolate CGMCC3.15110 (JX625159, KC843517, KC843534 and JX625186). Maximum likelihood tree based on concatenated sequences of the four genes were constructed using MEGA7. The results showed the strains isolated from A. nuda were closely related to C. cereale, as supported by high bootstrap values. A pathogenicity test of the C. cereale isolates was performed on first unfolding leaves of A. nuda. Koch's postulates were carried out with isolates by spraying a conidial suspension of 106 conidia/mL on leaves of healthy A. nuda. Four replicated pots were inoculated at a time, 10 leaves each pot, while sterile distilled water was used as the control. All treated plants were placed in a moist chamber (25°C, 16-h light and 8-h dark period). Anthracnose symptoms developed on the inoculated plants 7 days post inoculation while all control plants remained healthy. Microscopic examination showed the surface of infected leaves had the same acervuli, setae, and conidia as the original isolate. The pathogenicity test was repeated three times. C. cereale was previously reported as the causal agent of anthracnose on feather reed grass in US (Crouch et al. 2009). To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. cereale as the causal agent of A. nuda anthracnose in China.


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 ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (10) ◽  
pp. 1434-1434
Author(s):  
J.-H. Kwon ◽  
D.-W. Kang ◽  
M.-G. Cheon ◽  
J. Kim

In South Korea, the culture, production, and consumption of blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum) have increased rapidly over the past 10 years. In June and July 2012, blueberry plants with leaf spots (~10% of disease incidence) were sampled from a blueberry orchard in Jinju, South Korea. Leaf symptoms included small (1 to 5 mm in diameter) brown spots that were circular to irregular in shape. The spots expanded and fused into irregularly shaped, large lesions with distinct dark, brownish-red borders. The leaves with severe infection dropped early. A fungus was recovered consistently from sections of surface-disinfested (1% NaOCl) symptomatic leaf tissue after transfer onto water agar and sub-culture on PDA at 25°C. Fungal colonies were dark olive and produced loose, aerial hyphae on the culture surfaces. Conidia, which had 3 to 6 transverse septa, 1 to 2 longitudinal septa, and sometimes also a few oblique septa, were pale brown to golden brown, ellipsoid to ovoid, obclavate to obpyriform, and 16 to 42 × 7 to 16 μm (n = 50). Conidiophores were pale to mid-brown, solitary or fasciculate, and 28 to 116 × 3 to 5 μm (n = 50). The species was placed in the Alternaria alternata group (1). To confirm the identity of the fungus, the complete internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rDNA region of a representative isolate, AAVC-01, was amplified using ITS1 and ITS4 primers (2). The DNA products were cloned into the pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega, Madison, WI) and the resulting pOR13 plasmid was sequenced using universal primers. The resulting 570-bp sequence was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. KJ636460). Comparison of ITS rDNA sequences with other Alternaria spp. using ClustalX showed ≥99% similarity with the sequences of A. alternata causing blight on Jatropha curcas (JQ660842) from Mexico and Cajannus cajan (JQ074093) from India, citrus black rot (AF404664) from South Africa, and other Alternaria species, including A. tenuissima (WAC13639) (3), A. lini (Y17071), and A. longipes (AF267137). Two base substitutions, C to T at positions 345 and 426, were found in the 570-bp amplicon. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the present Alternaria sp. infecting blueberry grouped separately from A. tenuissima and A. alternata reported from other hosts. A representative isolate of the pathogen was used to inoculate V. corymbosum Northland leaves for pathogenicity testing. A conidial suspension (2 × 104 conidia/ml) from a single spore culture and 0.025% Tween was spot inoculated onto 30 leaves, ranging from recently emerged to oldest, of 2-year-old V. corymbosum Northland plants. Ten leaves were treated with sterilized distilled water and 0.025% Tween as a control. The plants were kept in a moist chamber with >90% relative humidity at 25°C for 48 h and then moved to a greenhouse. After 15 days, leaf spot symptoms similar to those observed in the field developed on the inoculated leaves, whereas the control plants remained asymptomatic. The causal fungus was re-isolated from the lesions of the inoculated plants to fulfill Koch's postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of Alternaria sp. on V. corymbosum in South Korea. References: (1) E. G. Simmons. Page 1797 in: Alternaria: An Identification Manual. CBS Fungal Biodiversity Centre, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 2007. (2) T. J. White et al. Page 315 in: PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, 1990. (3) M. P. You et al. Plant Dis. 98:423, 2014.


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 ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 95 (7) ◽  
pp. 874-874 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. M. Shen ◽  
C. H. Chao ◽  
H. L. Liu

Gynura bicolor (Roxb. ex Willd.) DC., known as Okinawa spinach or hong-feng-cai, is a commonly consumed vegetable in Asian countries. In May 2010, plants with blight and wilt symptoms were observed in commercial vegetable farms in Changhua, Taiwan. Light brown-to-black blight lesions developed from the top of the stems to the petioles and extended to the base of the leaves. Severely infected plants declined and eventually died. Disease incidence was approximately 20%. Samples of symptomatic tissues were surface sterilized in 0.6% NaOCl and plated on water agar. A Phytophthora sp. was consistently isolated and further plated on 10% unclarified V8 juice agar, with daily radial growths of 7.6, 8.6, 5.7, and 2.4 mm at 25, 30, 35, and 37°C, respectively. Four replicates were measured for each temperature. No hyphal growth was observed at 39°C. Intercalary hyphal swellings and proliferating sporangia were produced in culture plates flooded with sterile distilled water. Sporangia were nonpapillate, obpyriform to ellipsoid, base tapered or rounded, and 43.3 (27.5 to 59.3) × 27.6 (18.5 to 36.3) μm. Clamydospores and oospores were not observed. Oospores were present in dual cultures with an isolate of P. nicotianae (p731) (1) A2 mating type, indicating that the isolate was heterothallic. A portion of the internal transcribed spacer sequence was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. HQ717146). The sequence was 99% identical to that of P. drechsleri SCRP232 (ATCC46724) (3), a type isolate of the species. The pathogen was identified as P. drechsleri Tucker based on temperature growth, morphological characteristics, and ITS sequence homology (3). To evaluate pathogenicity, the isolated P. drechsleri was inoculated on greenhouse-potted G. bicolor plants. Inoculum was obtained by grinding two dishes of the pathogen cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) with sterile distilled water in a blender. After filtering through a gauze layer, the filtrate was aliquoted to 240 ml. The inoculum (approximately 180 sporangia/ml) was sprayed on 24 plants of G. bicolor. An equal number of plants treated with sterile PDA processed in the same way served as controls. After 1 week, incubation at an average temperature of 29°C, blight and wilt symptoms similar to those observed in the fields appeared on 12 inoculated plants. The pathogen was reisolated from the lesions of diseased stems and leaves, fulfilling Koch's postulates. The controls remained symptomless. The pathogenicity test was repeated once with similar results. G. bicolor in Taiwan has been recorded to be infected by P. cryptogea (1,2), a species that resembles P. drechsleri. The recorded isolates of P. cryptogea did not have a maximal growth temperature at or above 35°C (1,2), a distinctive characteristic to discriminate between the two species (3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. drechsleri being associated with stem and foliar blight of G. bicolor. References: (1) P. J. Ann. Plant Pathol. Bull. 5:146, 1996. (2) H. H. Ho et al. The Genus Phytophthora in Taiwan. Institute of Botany, Academia Sinica, Taipei, 1995. (3) R. Mostowfizadeh-Ghalamfarsa et al. Fungal Biol. 114:325, 2010.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (11) ◽  
pp. 1580-1580 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Kithan ◽  
L. Daiho

Etlingera linguiformis (Roxb.) R.M.Sm. of Zingiberaceae family is an important indigenous medicinal and aromatic plant of Nagaland, India, that grows well in warm climates with loamy soil rich in humus (1). The plant rhizome has medicinal benefits in treating sore throats, stomachache, rheumatism, and respiratory complaints, while its essential oil is used in perfumery. A severe disease incidence of leaf blight was observed on the foliar portion of E. linguiformis at the Patkai mountain range of northeast India in September 2012. Initial symptoms of the disease are small brown water soaked flecks appearing on the upper leaf surface with diameter ranging from 0.5 to 3 cm, which later coalesced to form dark brown lesions with a well-defined border. Lesions often merged to form large necrotic areas, covering more than 90% of the leaf surface, which contributed to plant death. The disease significantly reduces the number of functional leaves. As disease progresses, stems and rhizomes were also affected, reducing quality and yield. The diseased leaf tissues were surface sterilized with 0.2% sodium hypochlorite for 2 min followed by rinsing in sterile distilled water and transferred into potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium. After 3 days, the growing tips of the mycelium were transferred to PDA slants and incubated at 25 ± 2°C until conidia formation. Fungal colonies on PDA were dark gray to dark brown, usually zonate; stromata regularly and abundantly formed in culture. Conidia were straight to curved, ellipsoidal, 3-septate, rarely 4-septate, middle cells broad and darker than other two end cells, middle septum not median, smooth, 18 to 32 × 8 to 16 μm (mean 25.15 × 12.10 μm). Conidiophores were terminal and lateral on hyphae and stromata, simple or branched, straight or flexuous, often geniculate, septate, pale brown to brown, smooth, and up to 800 μm thick (2,3). Pathogen identification was performed by the Indian Type Culture Collection, Division of Plant Pathology, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi (ITCC Accession No. 7895.10). Further molecular identity of the pathogen was confirmed as Curvularia aeria by PCR amplification and sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the ribosomal DNA by using primers ITS4 and ITS5 (4). The sequence was submitted to GenBank (Accession No. MTCC11875). BLAST analysis of the fungal sequence showed 100% nucleotide similarity with Cochliobolus lunatus and Curvularia aeria. Pathogenicity tests were performed by spraying with an aqueous conidial suspension (1 × 106 conidia /ml) on leaves of three healthy Etlingera plants. Three plants sprayed with sterile distilled water served as controls. The first foliar lesions developed on leaves 7 days after inoculation and after 10 to 12 days, 80% of the leaves were severely infected. Control plants remained healthy. The inoculated leaves developed similar blight symptoms to those observed on naturally infected leaves. C. aeria was re-isolated from the inoculated leaves, thus fulfilling Koch's postulates. The pathogenicity test was repeated twice. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the presence of C. aeria on E. linguiformis. References: (1) M. H. Arafat et al. Pharm. J. 16:33, 2013. (2) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. CMI, Kew, Surrey, UK, 1971. (3) K. J. Martin and P. T. Rygiewicz. BMC Microbiol. 5:28, 2005. (4) C. V. Suberamanian. Proc. Indian Acad. Sci. 38:27, 1955.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Md Aktaruzzaman ◽  
Tania Afroz ◽  
Hyo-Won Choi ◽  
Byung Sup Kim

Perilla (Perilla frutescens var. japonica), a member of the family Labiatae, is an annual herbaceous plant native to Asia. Its fresh leaves are directly consumed and its seeds are used for cooking oil. In July 2018, leaf spots symptoms were observed in an experimental field at Gangneung-Wonju National University, Gangneung, Gangwon province, Korea. Approximately 30% of the perilla plants growing in an area of about 0.1 ha were affected. Small, circular to oval, necrotic spots with yellow borders were scattered across upper leaves. Masses of white spores were observed on the leaf underside. Ten small pieces of tissue were removed from the lesion margins of the lesions, surface disinfected with NaOCl (1% v/v) for 30 s, and then rinsed three times with distilled water for 60 s. The tissue pieces were then placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and incubated at 25°C for 7 days. Five single spore isolates were obtained and cultured on PDA. The fungus was slow-growing and produced 30-50 mm diameter, whitish colonies on PDA when incubated at 25ºC for 15 days. Conidia (n= 50) ranged from 5.5 to 21.3 × 3.5 to 5.8 μm, were catenate, in simple or branched chains, ellipsoid-ovoid, fusiform, and old conidia sometimes had 1 to 3 conspicuous hila. Conidiophores (n= 10) were 21.3 to 125.8 × 1.3 to 3.6 μm in size, unbranched, straight or flexuous, and hyaline. The morphological characteristics of five isolates were similar. Morphological characteristics were consistent with those described for Ramularia coleosporii (Braun, 1998). Two representative isolates (PLS 001 & PLS003) were deposited in the Korean Agricultural Culture Collection (KACC48670 & KACC 48671). For molecular identification, a multi-locus sequence analysis was conducted. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the rDNA, partial actin (ACT) gene and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) gene were amplified using primer sets ITS1/4, ACT-512F/ACT-783R and gpd1/gpd2, respectively (Videira et al. 2016). Sequences obtained from each of the three loci for isolate PLS001 and PLS003 were deposited in GenBank with accession numbers MH974744, MW470869 (ITS); MW470867, MW470870 (ACT); and MW470868, MW470871 (GAPDH), respectively. Sequences for all three genes exhibited 100% identity with R. coleosporii, GenBank accession nos. GU214692 (ITS), KX287643 (ACT), and 288200 (GAPDH) for both isolates. A multi-locus phylogenetic tree, constructed by the neighbor-joining method with closely related reference sequences downloaded from the GenBank database and these two isolates demonstrated alignment with R. coleosporii. To confirm pathogenicity, 150 mL of a conidial suspension (2 × 105 spores per mL) was sprayed on five, 45 days old perilla plants. An additional five plants, to serve as controls, were sprayed with sterile water. All plants were placed in a humidity chamber (>90% relative humidity) at 25°C for 48 h after inoculation and then placed in a greenhouse at 22/28°C (night/day). After 15 days leaf spot symptoms, similar to the original symptoms, developed on the leaves of the inoculated plants, whereas the control plants remained symptomless. The pathogenicity test was repeated twice with similar results. A fungus was re-isolated from the leaf lesions on the inoculated plants which exhibited the same morphological characteristics as the original isolates, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. R. coleosporii has been reported as a hyperparasite on the rust fungus Coleosporium plumeriae in India & Thailand and also as a pathogen infecting leaves of Campanula rapunculoides in Armenia, Clematis gouriana in Taiwan, Ipomoea batatas in Puerto Rico, and Perilla frutescens var. acuta in China (Baiswar et al. 2015; Farr and Rossman 2021). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of R. coleosporii causing leaf spot on P. frutescens var. japonica in Korea. This disease poses a threat to production and management strategies to minimize leaf spot should be developed.


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