scholarly journals First report of root rot caused by Fusarium armeniacum on American ginseng in China

Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ximei Zhang ◽  
Yanmeng Bi ◽  
Junfei LI ◽  
Huihui SHAO ◽  
XIAO LIN JIAO ◽  
...  

American ginseng (Panax quinquefolius) is an important medicinal plant cultivated in China since the 1980s. Its dried roots are used for food, health care products, and medicine in China (Yuan et al. 2010). Root rot caused by Fusarium spp. was a major disease, with 33 to 41% incidence surveyed in main production areas of Wendeng County (121.80 °E, 37.09 °N) in Shandong Province, China in 2016 to 2019. Symptoms included soft, water-soaked, dark brown to black lesions on the roots. Lesions progressed and the inner parts gradually disintegrated. One-year-old diseased roots were collected in September 2016. Symptomatic tissues were surface-sterilized in 75% ethanol for 30 s and 0.8% NaOCl for 3 min, rinsed in sterile water, plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated at 25°C in darkness. Single colonies were then obtained and transferred to carnation leaf agar (CLA) (Burgess et al. 1993) for growth at 25°C with a 12-h photoperiod. Colonies cultured on PDA for 7 days were white to light pink, turning to apricot pigmentation in color. After 30 days on CLA, the colonies produced elongate, falcate macroconidia having 3 to 5 septa, with a long, tapering and curved apical cell, and having the size ranging from 31.1 to 45.6 μm long x 4 to 4.6 μm wide. Microconidia were zero to 1septate, ellipsoid to ovoid and varied in size from 9.5 to 16.8 μm long x 3 to 3.2 μm wide. Chlamydospores formed abundantly, in chains or clusters. This fungus was identified as F. armeniacum (Burgess et al. 1993). Identification was confirmed by sequencing three DNA regions including the internal spacer ribosomal DNA (ITS), elongation factor 1α and β-tubulin genes (Lu et al. 2019). The three DNA regions (MN417271, MG457199, and MN427653) had 100% homology to the sequences of F. armeniacum (KJ737378, HM744664 and HQ141640) (Wang et al. 2015, Yli-Mattila et al. 2011). Pathogenicity tests were conducted on 1- to 2-year-old bare roots and 2-year-old whole plants. For root inoculation, 14 healthy roots were inoculated with two mycelial PDA plugs/root. After 3 to 10 days at 25°C, all the inoculated roots showed water-soaked and root rot symptoms while no lesions were observed in the control roots. For plant inoculation, eight seedlings planted in pots filled with sterilized soil were inoculated by pouring a conidial suspension of 1×105 conidia/ml at 30 ml/pot. Eight seedlings inoculated with sterilized water served as the controls. After 90 days, only 37.5% of the roots survived with typical root rot symptoms whereas the control plants remained symptomless. F. armeniacum was re-isolated from symptomatic roots but not from the control roots. Besides F. armeniacum, F. solani and F. oxysporum that have been reported to be associated with American ginseng root rot in China and Canada (Reeleder et al. 2002; Punja et al. 2008) were also obtained from the diseased root samples in this study. However, the development of root rot caused by F. armeniacum was much more rapid and its symptoms were more severe. Moreover, F. armeniacum could directly infect American ginseng with no wound requirement. F. armeniacum was previously reported on Glycine max (Leguminosae) (Ellis et al. 2012), Platycodon grandiflorus (Campanulaceae) (Wang et al. 2015) and natural grasses (Poaceae) (Nichea et al. 2015). This is the first report of F. armeniacum causing root rot on American ginseng in China. As this species is more virulent to American ginseng, more research is needed to work on this disease.

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuning Chen ◽  
Wei Sun ◽  
Huizhu Yuan ◽  
Xiaojing Yan

Gerbera (Gerbera jamesonii Bolus) is an important cut flower grown globally. In 2020, gerbera plants (Redaicaoyuan, Baimawangzi, and Hongditan cultivars) with roots, crowns, and stems rot were found in a greenhouse in Nanping, Fujian, China. Approximately 30% of the 60,000 plants showed symptoms. Diseased plants were stunted with chlorotic leaves. The leaves and flower heads were wilted and withered. Brown discoloration with red to black streaks occurred in the vascular system of the crown and stem. The stem pieces (3×3 mm) showing the symptom were surface-disinfected with 1% NaClO for 1 min and washed three times with sterilized water. The stem pieces were then dried and placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25℃ inside a dark chamber. Ten single-spored isolates were identified as Fusarium incarnatum based on morphological features. White to light brown mycelia were observed among the isolates on PDA medium. Falculate, multicelluar, straight to slightly curved macroconidia produced in monophialide sporodochia without distinctive foot shaped basal cell; and chlamydospores produced in some isolates (Leslie and Summerell). The size of macroconidia was 36.4 ± 5.20 × 4.6 ± 1.3 μm (n = 100) with 3 to 5 septates. Microconidia were mostly 0 to 1 septate measured 14.6 ± 1.9 × 2.6 ± 0.5 μm (n=100). Based on the morphological observation, isolates were further identified by molecular method. The ITS1/4 region combined with partial gene fragments of translation elongation factor (EF-1α, primer EF1/EF2, Geiser et al.) and calmodulin (CAM, primer CL1/CL2A, O’Donnell.) from the isolates were amplified and sequenced. All of the three tested isolates showed identical gene sequences. Sequences amplified from one represented isolate FIN-1 were submitted to Genbank. BLAST searches revealed that ITS1/4 (MW527088), EF-1α (MW556488), and CAM (MW556487) had 99.22%, 99.53%, 99.42% identity compared to F. incarnatum (MN480497, MN233577, and LN901596, respectively) in GenBank. FUSARIUM-ID (Geiser et al. 2004) analysis also showed 99 to 100% similarity with sequences of the F. incarnatum-equiseti species complex (FIESC) (FD_01636 for CAM, FD_01643 for EF-1α). The phylogenetic analysis was conducted using neighbor-joining algorithm based on the ITS, EF-1α, and CAM gene sequences. The isolate was clustered with F. incarnatum clade. Then, the pathogenicity of the fungus was confirmed by performing Koch’s postulates. Pure single-spored cultures were grown on carboxymethyl-cellulose (CMC) medium for sporulation. G. jamesonii plants used for pathogenicity tests were grown on sterilized potting soil in a plastic container to the ten-leaf stage prior to inoculation. Spores harvested from the CMC medium were adjusted to a concentration of 1×105 conidial/ml. Twelve healthy rooted gerbera seedlings were inoculated by drenching 10 ml of the conidial suspension onto roots. Twelve gerbera seedlings treated with 10 ml sterile water served as control treatments. Plants were grown in the glasshouse at temperatures of 23°C, relative humidity >70%, and 16 h light per day. After 10 days, blackening stems and withered leaf edges began to appear on inoculated seedlings, whereas control seedlings remained healthy. F. incarnatum was consistently re-isolated from the symptomatic stems, whereas no isolates were obtained from the control seedlings. The assay was conducted twice. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of F. incarnatum causing stem and root rot on G. jamesonii.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sixto Velarde Felix ◽  
Victor Valenzuela ◽  
Pedro Ortega ◽  
Gustavo Fierros ◽  
Pedro Rojas ◽  
...  

Chickpea (Cicer aretinium L.) is a legume crop of great importance worldwide. In January 2019, wilting symptoms on chickpea (stunted grow, withered leaves, root rot and wilted plants) were observed in three fields of Culiacan Sinaloa Mexico, with an incidence of 3 to 5%. To identify the cause, eighty symptomatic chickpea plants were sampled. Tissue from roots was plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium. Typical Fusarium spp. colonies were obtained from all root samples. Ten pure cultures were obtained by single-spore culturing (Ff01 to Ff10). On PDA the colonies were abundant with white aerial mycelium, hyphae were branched and septae and light purple pigmentation was observed in the center of old cultures (Leslie and Summerell 2006). From 10-day-old cultures grown on carnation leaf agar medium, macroconidias were falciform, hyaline, with slightly curved apexes, three to five septate, with well-developed foot cells and blunt apical cells, and measured 26.6 to 45.8 × 2.2 to 7.0 μm (n = 40). The microconidia (n = 40) were hyaline, one to two celled, produced in false heads that measured 7.4 to 20.1 (average 13.7) μm × 2.4 to 8.9 (average 5.3) μm (n = 40) at the tips of long monophialides, and were oval or reniform, with apexes rounded, 8.3 to 12.1 × 1.6 to 4.7 μm; chlamydospores were not evident. These characteristics fit those of the Fusarium solani (Mart.) Sacc. species complex, FSSC (Summerell et al. 2003). The internal transcribed spacer and the translation elongation factor 1 alpha (EF1-α) genes (O’Donnell et al. 1998) were amplified by polymerase chain reaction and sequenced from the isolate Ff02 and Ff08 (GenBank accession nos. KJ501093 and MN082369). Maximum likelihood analysis was carried out using the EF1-α sequences (KJ501093 and MN082369) from the Ff02 and Ff08 isolates and other species from the Fusarium solani species complex (FSSC). Phylogenetic analysis revealed the isolate most closely related with F. falciforme (100% bootstrap). For pathogenicity testing, a conidial suspension (1x106 conidia/ml) was prepared by harvesting spores from 10-days-old cultures on PDA. Twenty 2-week-old chickpea seedlings from two cultivars (P-2245 and WR-315) were inoculated by dipping roots into the conidial suspension for 20 min. The inoculated plants were transplanted into a 50-hole plastic tray containing sterilized soil and maintained in a growth chamber at 25°C, with a relative humidity of >80% and a 12-h/12-h light/dark cycle. After 8 days, the first root rot symptoms were observed on inoculating seedlings and the infected plants eventually died within 3 to 4 weeks after inoculation. No symptoms were observed plants inoculated with sterilized distilled water. The fungus was reisolated from symptomatic tissues of inoculated plants and was identified by sequencing the partial EF1-α gene again and was identified as F. falciforme (FSSC 3 + 4) (O’Donnell et al. 2008) based on its morphological characteristics, genetic analysis, and pathogenicity test, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. The molecular identification was confirmed via BLAST on the FusariumID and Fusarium MLST databases. Although FSSC has been previously reported causing root rot in chickpea in USA, Chile, Spain, Cuba, Iran, Poland, Israel, Pakistan and Brazil, to our knowledge this is the first report of root rot in chickpea caused by F. falciforme in Mexico. This is important for chickpea producers and chickpea breeding programs.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baoyu Shen ◽  
Wensong Sun ◽  
Kun Liu ◽  
Jing Tian Zhang

Wuweizi [Schisandra chinensis(Turcz.)Baill.] is used for traditional medicine in northeastern China. In August of 2019, root rot of S. chinensis with an incidence of 30%-50% was observed in a commercial field located in Liaozhong city (41º29’57” N, 122º52’33” E) in the Liaoning province of China. The diseased plants were less vigorous, stunted, and had leaves that turned yellow to brown. Eventually, the whole plant wilted and died. The diseased roots were poorly developed with brown lesion and eventually they would rot. To determine the causal agent, symptomatic roots were collected, small pieces of root with typical lesions were surface sterilized in 2% NaOCl for 3 min, rinsed three times in distilled water, and then plated onto PDA medium. After incubation at 26°C for 5 days, whitish-pink or carmine to rose red colonies on PDA were transferred to carnation leaf agar (CLA). Single spores were isolated with an inoculation needle using a stereomicroscope. Five single conidia isolates obtained from the colonies were incubated at 26°C for 7 days, abundant macroconidia were formed in sporodochia. Macroconidia were falcate, slender, with a distinct curve to the latter half of the apical cell, mostly 3 to 5 septate, measuring 31.3 to 47.8 × 4.8 to 7.5µm (n=50). Microconidia were oval and irregular ovals, 0-1 septate, measuring 5.0 to 17.5 × 2.5 to 17.5µm (n=50). Chlamydospores formed in chains on within or on top of the mycelium. Morphological characteristics of the isolates were in agreement with Fusarium acuminatum (Leslie and Summerell, 2006). To confirm the identity, the partial sequence of the translation elongation factor 1 alpha (TEF1-á) gene of five isolates was amplified using the primers EF-1(ATGGGTAAGGARGACAAG) and EF-2 (GGARGTACCAGTSATCATGTT) (O’Donnell et al. 2015 ) and sequenced. The rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region for the five isolates was also amplified using the primers ITS1 (TCCGTAGGTGAACCTGCGG) and ITS4 (TCCTCCGCTATTGATATGC) (White et al.1990) and sequenced. The identical sequences were obtained, and one representative sequence of isolate WW31-5 was submitted to GenBank. BLASTn analysis of the TEF-á sequence (MW423624) and ITS sequence (MZ145386), revealed 100%(708/685bp, 563/563bp)sequence identity to F. acuminatum MH595498 and MW560481, respectively. Pathogenicity tests were conducted in greenhouse. Inoculums of F. acuminatum was prepared from the culture of WW31-5 incubated in 2% mung beans juice on a shaker (140 rpm) at 26°C for 5 days. Ten roots of 2-years old plants of S. chinensis were immersed in the conidial suspension (2 × 105 conidia/ml) for 6 hours, and another ten roots immersed in sterilized distilled water in plastic bucket for 6 hours. All these plants were planted into pots with sterilized field soil (two plants per pot). Five pots planted with inoculated plants and another five pots planted with uninoculated plants served as controls. All ten pots were maintained in a greenhouse at 22-26°C for 21 days and irrigated with sterilized water. The leaves of the inoculated plants became yellow,gradually dried up, eventually finally all the aboveground parts died. The roots of the inoculated plants were rotted. Non-inoculated control plants had no symptoms. F. acuminatum was reisolated from the roots of inoculated plants and had morphology identical to the original isolate. The experiment was repeated twice with similar results. F. acuminatum has been reported as a pathogen caused root rot of ginseng (Wang et al. 2016) and not reported on Wuweizi in China. To our knowledge, this is the first report of root rot of S. chinensis caused by F. acuminatum. We have also observed the disease at Benxi city of Liaoning Province in 2020 and it has become an important disease in production of S. chinensis and the effective control method should be adopted to reduce losses.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
PengYing MEI ◽  
Xuhong Song ◽  
Zhiyu Zhu ◽  
Longyun Li

Chongqing coptis (Coptis chinensis Franchet) industry produces more than 60% of the Chinese coptis crop, and has been exported to many countries and regions. Since 2008, root rot has become a serious and widespread disease on coptis plants in Shizhu county with an average incidence of 40%, and yield losses up to 67%. Symptomatic coptis plants showed stunted growth, with the fibrous roots and main roots having brown or black, rotten, necrotic lesions. To our knowledge, Fusarium solani, F. carminascens, F. oxysporum and F. tricinctum have been previously reported as pathogens of coptis root rot (Luo et al. 2014; Cheng et al. 2020; Wu et al. 2020), but non Fusarium pathogens has not been reported yet. In order to identify new pathogens, 33 diseased roots were collected from Shizhu (30°18'N, 108°30'E) in October 2019. Small samples (0.5 cm in length) were cut from the border between diseased and healthy tissue, and then put on PDA after surface sterilization. Cultures were incubated at 25°C in dark until fungal colonies were observed. After subculturing for 3 times, 3 out of 21 isolates yielded a similar type of fungal colony. White, aerial, fluffy mycelium were formed and reached 8.3 cm diameter within 7 days, and dark pigmentation developed in the centre. Colonies turned to gray with age, and abundant dark brown pycnidia and black stromata were formed at maturity. Alpha conidia were aseptate, hyaline, fusiform to ellipsoidal, often biguttulate, measuring (6.0-8.5)×(2.0-3.0) μm. Beta conidia were aseptate, hyaline, linear to hooked, measuring (18-30)×(1.0-1.5) μm (Figure S1). For further identification, a multigene phylogenetic analysis was carried out. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS), translation elongation factor 1ɑ (tef1-ɑ), histone H3 (his3), calmodulin (cal), and β-tubulin (tub2) gene regions were amplified with ITS1/ITS4, EF1-728F/EF1-986R, CYLH3F/H3-1b, CAL228F/CAL737R, T1/Bt2b (White et al. 1990; Glass and Donaldson 1995; Carbone and Kohn 1999; Crous et al. 2004). GenBank accession numbers of isolate H13 were MT463391 for the ITS region, MT975573 for tef1-ɑ, MT975574 for his3, MT975575 for cal, and MT975576 for tub2. BLAST results showed the ITS, tef1-ɑ, his3, cal and tub2 sequences revealed 99.82% (553/554 base pairs), 100% (347/347 base pairs), 100% (474/474 base pairs), 99.39% (486/489 base pairs), and 99.14% (803/810 base pairs) homology respectively with those of Diaporthe eres (MN816416.1, KU557616.1, KC343564.1, KU557595.1, and KY569366.1). Thus, H13 were identified as D. eres based on its morphological and molecular characteristics. Pathogenicity of D. eres in coptis was investigated using the H13 isolate (1 of the 3 isolates). The roots of 10 healthy 2-year-old coptis plants were individually inoculated with 5 ml of a 106 conidia/mL conidial suspension and sterilized water was used to mock inoculate. Thirty days after inoculation, most of the inoculated coptis roots showed dark brown and rotten root, similar to those observed in the field, whereas mock inoculated roots showed healthy. D. eres was recovered from symptomatic roots and identified based on morphology. To our knowledge, this is the first report of D. eres causing root rot of coptis not only in China but anywhere in the world.


Plant Disease ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 94 (8) ◽  
pp. 1069-1069 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Bienapfl ◽  
D. K. Malvick ◽  
J. A. Percich

Multiple Fusarium species have been found in association with soybean (Glycine max) plants exhibiting root rot in the United States (3). Soybean plants that lacked apparent foliar symptoms, but exhibited 2- to 5-mm brown, necrotic taproot lesions and lateral root necrosis were observed in Minnesota in one field each in Marshall and Otter Tail counties in July of 2007, as well as in one field in Marshall County in July of 2008. Sampling was conducted as part of a study investigating root rot in major soybean-production areas of Minnesota. Plants were arbitrarily dug up at the R3 growth stage. Root systems were washed, surface disinfested in 0.5% NaOCl for 3 min, rinsed in deionized water, and dried. Fusarium isolates were recovered from root sections with necrotic lesions embedded in modified Nash-Snyder medium (1). One resulting Fusarium colony from one plant per county was transferred to half-strength acidified potato dextrose agar (PDA) and carnation leaf agar (CLA) to examine morphological characteristics (4). Culture morphology on PDA consisted of flat mycelium with sparse white aerial mycelium. On CLA, thick-walled macroconidia with a hooked apical cell and a foot-shaped basal cell were produced in cream-colored sporodochia. Macroconidia ranged from 32.5 to 45.0 μm long. Microconidia were oval to cylindrical with 0 to 1 septa, ranged from 7.5 to 11.25 μm long, and were produced on monophialides. Chlamydospores were produced abundantly in chains that were terminal and intercalary in the hyphae of 4-week-old cultures. Morphological characteristics of the three isolates were consistent with descriptions of F. redolens (2,4). The identity of each isolate was confirmed by sequencing the translation elongation factor 1-α (TEF) locus (4). BLAST analysis of the TEF sequences from each isolate against the FUSARIUM-ID database resulted in a 100% match for 17 accessions of F. redolens (e.g., FD 01103, FD 01369). Each F. redolens isolate was tested for pathogenicity on soybean. Sterile sorghum grain was infested with each isolate and incubated for 2 weeks. Sterile sorghum was used for control plants. Soybean seeds of cv. AG2107 were planted in 11.4-cm pots ~1 cm above a 25-cm3 layer of infested sorghum or sterile sorghum. Two replicate pots containing four plants each were used per treatment and the experiment was repeated once. Root rot was assessed 28 days after planting. Each F. redolens isolate consistently caused taproot necrosis on inoculated plants, whereas control plants did not exhibit root necrosis. Isolations were made from roots of inoculated and control plants and the isolates recovered from inoculated plants were identified as F. redolens based on morphological characteristics and TEF sequences. Fusarium species were not isolated from control plants. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. redolens causing root rot of soybean; however, it is possible F. redolens has been found previously and misidentified as F. oxysporum (2,4). Results from inoculations suggest that F. redolens may be an important root rot pathogen in Minnesota soybean fields. References: (1) J. C. Bienapfl et al. Acta Hortic. 668:123, 2004. (2) C. Booth and J. M. Waterston. No. 27 in: CMI Descriptions of Pathogenic Fungi and Bacteria. CMI, Kew, England, 1964. (3) G. L. Hartman et al. Compendium of Soybean Diseases. 4th ed. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN, 1999. (4) J. F. Leslie and B. A. Summerell. The Fusarium Laboratory Manual. Blackwell Publishing, Ames, IA, 2006.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Xiao Li ◽  
Song Wen Sun ◽  
Yu Bao Shen ◽  
Kun Liu ◽  
Jing Tian Zhang

Polygonatum odoratum (Mill.) Druce is used in traditional Chinese medicine and also consumed as a vegetable. In July of 2020, a root rot was observed on P. odoratum in a commercial field located in Benxi city (41º23’32” N, 124º04’27” E), Liaoning province of China. About 35% diseased plants in the field exhibited poor vigor, were stunted, and had yellow or brown leaves. Affected plants wilted and died. Roots of the plants were poorly developed, had brown lesions, and later rotted. To determine the causal agent, symptomatic roots with typical lesions were cut into small pieces, surface sterilized in 2% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) for 3 min, rinsed three times in sterile water, and plated onto PDA medium. After 5 days of incubation at 26°C, whitish-pink to red colonies growing from the root samples were observed and transferred to carnation leaf agar (CLA). Ten single conidia isolates obtained from the colonies on CLA were incubated at 26°C for 10 days. Abundant macroconidia were formed in sporodochia on CLA. Macroconidia were falcate, slender, distinctively curved in the bottom half of the apical cell, had 3 to 5 septa, and 33.1 - 46.3 × 5.0 - 7.2 μm (n=50). Chlamydospores formed in chains or single, measuring 13.8 to 14.5 μm in diameter. Microconidia were not observed on CLA. Morphologically, the isolates were identified as Fusarium acuminatum (Leslie and Summerell, 2006). To confirm the species identity, the partial translation elongation factor 1 alpha (TEF1-α) gene and rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of isolate YZ5-2 were amplified and sequenced (O’Donnell et al. 2015; White et al.1990). BLASTn analysis of both TEF sequence (MW423623) and ITS sequence (MW423626), revealed 100% (696/692 bp) and 99.64% (563/602 bp) sequence identity with F. acuminatum LC546967 and MF509746, respectively. Pathogenicity tests were carried out in the greenhouse. A conidial suspension (2 × 106 conidia per ml) of the isolate YZ5-2 was prepared from 7-day-old cultures grown in potato dextrose broth (PDB) o n a shaker (140 rpm) at 26±1°C. Five 12-liter pots were filled with sterilized field soil and each pot was drenched with 300ml of conidial suspension. Five control pots with sterilized field soil and 300 ml PDB were also included. Roots of 20 healthy P. odoratum plants were surface disinfected in 2% NaOCl for 3 min, and rinsed with sterilized water. Prior to planting, 2-3 pinholes (1.5× 1.0 mm) were made using a toothpick on the root surface of each plant, and they were then planted in each pot (2 plants per pot). All ten pots were maintained in a greenhouse at 22-26°C for 40 days. Plants grown in the pots inoculated with the conidial suspension were stunted, had yellowed leaves and were wilted. The roots of the affected plants were rotted. Disease symptoms were similar to those observed in field. Non-inoculated control plants had no symptoms. F. acuminatum was reisolated from inoculated plants and was identical to the original isolate. The experiment was repeated twice with similar results. To our knowledge, this is the first report of root rot of P. odoratum caused by F. acuminatum in China. The disease has since been observed on P. odoratum in fields in Liaoyang and Qingyuan city in Liaoning Province of China, and it has become an important threat to P. odoratum production in China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (7) ◽  
pp. 993-993 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Y. Li ◽  
Y. J. Wang ◽  
Z. K. Xie ◽  
R. Y. Wang ◽  
Y. Qiu ◽  
...  

Lily (Lilium spp.) is one of the most well-known horticultural crops, and plays an important economic role in China. In September 2011, wilted plants were observed on Lilium oriental hybrid cultivar ‘Sorbonne’ growing in Longde County, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China. Disease symptoms included wilting, stem and root rot, brown spots of bulbs and then bulbs rotting and spalling from the basal disc, plus a progressive yellowing and defoliation of the leaves from the base. Diseased plants were sampled from fields. Small pieces of symptomatic bulbs, stems, and roots from 10 different plants were surface disinfected with 75% ethanol for 30 s, 3% sodium hypochlorite for 5 min, and then washed three times in sterilize distilled water. The tissues were placed onto Martin Agar (2) at 25°C for 7 days. Nine isolates with morphology similar to Fusarium were obtained from the diseased tissues. Isolates were transferred to potato dextrose agar (PDA) and carnation leaf agar (CLA) and incubated at 25°C. Seven were identified as Fusarium oxysporum and one was F. solani, which have been reported as pathogens of lily in China (1). The other isolate, when grown on PDA, rapidly produced dense, white aerial mycelium that became pink with age and formed red pigments in the medium. On CLA, macroconidia with three to five septate were abundant, relatively slender, and curved to lunate. Microconidia were abundant, oval or pyriform, and one to two celled. Chlamydospores were in chains with smooth exine. The rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region and a portion of the translation elongation factor 1-alpha (EF-1α) gene of the fungus were amplified, with universal primers ITS1/ITS4 and EF1/EF2 primers respectively (3) and sequenced. In addition, the β-tubulin gene (β-tub) of the fungus was amplified with modified primers Btu-F-F01 (5′-CAGACMGGTCAGTGCGTAA-3′) and Btu-F-R01 (5′-TCTTGGGGTCGAACATCTG-3′) (4). BLASTn analysis showed that the ITS sequences of the isolate (GenBank Accession No. JX989827) had 98.9% similarity with those of F. tricinctum (EF611092, JF776665, and HM776425) and the EF-1α sequences of the isolate (JX989828) had 98.1% similarity with those of F. tricinctum (EU744837 and JX397850). The β-tub sequences of the isolate (JX989829) had 99.0% similarity with those of F. tricinctum (EU490236 and AB587077). The isolate was tested for pathogenicity. Two-month-old ‘Sorbonne’ seedlings were inoculated by placing 5 ml of conidial suspension (about 106 conidia per ml) over the roots of plants in each pot. Control plants were treated with sterile water in the same way. Plants were placed in a greenhouse at 22 to 25°C with a 15-h photoperiod. There were eight plants per pot and three replicates for each treatment. After 3 weeks, 87.5% of the inoculated plants exhibited browning of the root tips, root rot, and yellowing of the leaves, while control plants were symptomless. The pathogen was reisolated from the infected roots and identified as F. tricinctum, thus fulfilling Koch's postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of Fusarium wilt of lily caused by F. tricinctum. This information will provide guidance for the control of lily wilt disease and add information useful for the production of lilies. References: (1) C. Li and J. J. Li. Acta Phytopathol. Sin. (in Chinese) 26:192, 1995. (2) J. P. Martin. Soil Sci. 38:215, 1950. (3) K. O'Donnell et al. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95:2044, 1998. (4) M. Watanabe et al. BMC Evol. Biol. 11:322. 2011.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (5) ◽  
pp. 691-691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. H. Jeon ◽  
W. Cheon

Worldwide, Japanese yew (Taxus cuspidata Sieb. & Zucc.) is a popular garden tree, with large trees also being used for timber. In July 2012, leaf blight was observed on 10% of Japanese yew seedling leaves planted in a 500-m2 field in Andong, Gyeongsangbuk-do Province, South Korea. Typical symptoms included small, brown lesions that were first visible on the leaf margin, which enlarged and coalesced into the leaf becoming brown and blighted. To isolate potential pathogens from infected leaves, small sections of leaf tissue (5 to 10 mm2) were excised from lesion margins. Eight fungi were isolated from eight symptomatic trees, respectively. These fungi were hyphal tipped twice and transferred to potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates for incubation at 25°C. After 7 days, the fungi produced circular mats of white aerial mycelia. After 12 days, black acervuli containing slimy spore masses formed over the mycelial mats. Two representative isolates were further characterized. Their conidia were straight or slightly curved, fusiform to clavate, five-celled with constrictions at the septa, and 17.4 to 28.5 × 5.8 to 7.1 μm. Two to four 19.8- to 30.7-μm-long hyaline filamentous appendages (mostly three appendages) were attached to each apical cell, whereas one 3.7- to 7.1-μm-long hyaline appendage was attached to each basal cell, matching the description for Pestalotiopsis microspora (2). The pathogenicity of the two isolates was tested using 2-year-old plants (T. cuspidata var. nana Rehder; three plants per isolate) in 30-cm-diameter pots filled with soil under greenhouse conditions. The plants were inoculated by spraying the leaves with an atomizer with a conidial suspension (105 conidia/ml; ~50 ml on each plant) cultured for 10 days on PDA. As a control, three plants were inoculated with sterilized water. The plants were covered with plastic bags for 72 h to maintain high relative humidity (24 to 28°C). At 20 days after inoculation, small dark lesions enlarged into brown blight similar to that observed on naturally infected leaves. P. microspora was isolated from all inoculated plants, but not the controls. The fungus was confirmed by molecular analysis of the 5.8S subunit and flanking internal transcribed spaces (ITS1 and ITS2) of rDNA amplified from DNA extracted from single-spore cultures, and amplified with the ITS1/ITS4 primers and sequenced as previously described (4). Sequences were compared with other DNA sequences in GenBank using a BLASTN search. The P. microspora isolates were 99% homologous to other P. microspora (DQ456865, EU279435, FJ459951, and FJ459950). The morphological characteristics, pathogenicity, and molecular data assimilated in this study corresponded with the fungus P. microspora (2). This fungus has been previously reported as the causal agent of scab disease of Psidium guajava in Hawaii, the decline of Torreya taxifolia in Florida, and the leaf blight of Reineckea carnea in China (1,3). Therefore, this study presents the first report of P. microspora as a pathogen on T. cuspidata in Korea. The degree of pathogenicity of P. microspora to the Korean garden evergreen T. cuspidata requires quantification to determine its potential economic damage and to establish effective management practices. References: (1) D. F. Farr and A. Y. Rossman, Fungal Databases, Syst. Mycol. Microbiol. Lab. Retrieved from http://nt.ars-grin.gov/fungaldatabases/ (2) L. M. Keith et al. Plant Dis. 90:16, 2006. (3) S. S. N. Maharachchikumbura. Fungal Diversity 50:167, 2011. (4) T. J. White et al. PCR Protocols. Academic Press, San Diego, CA, 1990.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (9) ◽  
pp. 1273-1273 ◽  
Author(s):  
X.-M. Luo ◽  
J.-L. Li ◽  
J.-Y. Dong ◽  
A.-P. Sui ◽  
M.-L. Sheng ◽  
...  

China is the world's largest producer country of coptis (Coptis chinensis), the rhizomes of which are used in traditional Chinese medicine. Since 2008, however, root rot symptoms, including severe necrosis and wilting, have been observed on coptis plants in Chongqing, southwestern China. Of the plants examined from March 2011 to May 2013 in 27 fields, 15 to 30% were covered with black necrotic lesions. The leaves of infected plants showed wilt, necrotic lesions, drying, and death. The fibrous roots, storage roots, and rhizomes exhibited brown discoloration and progressive necrosis that caused mortality of the infected plants. Infected plants were analyzed to identify the causal organism. Discoloration of the internal vascular and cortical tissues of the rhizomes and taproots was also evident. Symptomatic taproots of the diseased coptis were surface sterilized in 1% sodium hypochlorite for 2 min, rinsed in sterile distilled water for 2 min, and then air-dried in sterilized atmosphere/laminar flow. Small pieces of disinfested tissue (0.3 cm in length) were transferred to petri dishes containing potato dextrose agar (PDA) supplemented with 125 μg ml–1 streptomycin sulfate and 100 μg ml–1 ampicillin, and incubated for 5 days at 25°C with a 12-h photoperiod. Four distinct species of fungal isolates (HL1 to 4) derived from single spores were isolated from 30 plants with root rot symptoms collected from the study sites. To verify the pathogenicity of individual isolates, healthy coptis plants were inoculated by dipping roots into a conidial suspension (106 conidia/ml) for 30 min (15 plants per isolate), as described previously (1). Inoculated plants were potted in a mixture of sterilized quartz sand-vermiculite-perlite (4:2:1, v/v) and incubated at 25/18°C and 85 to 90% relative humidity (day/night) in a growth chamber with a daily 16-h photoperiod of fluorescent light. Plants dipped in sterile distilled water were used as controls. After 15 days, symptoms similar to those observed in the field were observed on all plants (n = 15) that were inoculated with HL1, but symptoms were not observed on plants inoculated with HL2, HL3, and HL4, nor on control plants. HL1 was re-isolated from symptomatic plants but not from any other plants. Morphological characterization of HL1 was performed by microscopic examination. The septate hyphae, blunt microconidia (2 to 3 septa) in the foot cell and slightly curved microconidia in the apical cell, and chlamydospores were consistent with descriptions of Fusarium solani (2). The pathogen was confirmed to be F. solani by amplification and sequencing of the ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer (rDNA-ITS) using the universal primer pair ITS4 and ITS5. Sequencing of the PCR product revealed a 99 to 100% similarity with the ITS sequences of F. solani in GenBank (JQ724444.1 and EU273504.1). Phylogenetic analysis (MEGA 5.1) using the neighbor-joining algorithm placed the HL1 isolate in a well-supported cluster (97% bootstrap value based on 1,000 replicates) with JQ724444.1 and EU273504.1. The pathogen was thus identified as F. solani based on its morphological and molecular characteristics. To our knowledge, this is the first report of root rot of coptis caused by F. solani in the world. References: (1) K. Dobinson et al. Can. J. Plant Pathol. 18:55, 1996. (2) J. F. Leslie and B. A. Summerell. The Fusarium Laboratory Manual. Blackwell Publishing, Oxford, 2006.


Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
pp. 909-909 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Guo ◽  
Y. M. Pan ◽  
Z. M. Gao

Tree peony bark, a main component of Chinese traditional medicine used for alleviating fever and dissipating blood stasis, is mainly produced in Tongling, China. Recently, tree peony cultivation in this area was seriously affected by root rot, with approximately 20 to 30% disease incidence each year. The disease severely affects yield and quality of tree peony bark. During the past 2 years, we collected 56 diseased tree peony plants from Mudan and Fenghuang townships in Tongling. We found reddish brown to dark brown root rot in mature roots, especially on those with injuries. Plant samples collected were disinfected with 2% sodium hypochlorite and isolations were conducted on potato sucrose agar (PSA). Eleven isolates were obtained and all had white fluffy aerial hypha on PSA. Two types of conidia were produced; the larger, reaphook-shaped ones had three to five septa and the smaller, ellipse-shaped ones had one or no septum. The reaphook-shaped conidia were 20.15 to 37.21 × 3.98 to 5.27 μm and the ellipse-shaped conidia were 6.02 to 15.52 × 2.21 to 5.33 μm in size. Chlamydospores were produced, with two to five arranged together. Biological characteristics of the fungi indicated that the optimum temperature for the mycelial growth on PSA was 25 to 30°C and the optimum pH range was 5.5 to 7.0. The above morphological characteristics point the fungal isolates to be Fusarium solani. To confirm pathogenicity, 30 healthy 1-year-old tree peony seedling plants were grown in pots (25 cm in diameter) with sterilized soil and a conidial suspension from one isolate (FH-1, 5 × 105 conidia/ml) was used for soil inoculation. Inoculated seedlings were maintained at 28°C in a greenhouse with a 12-h photoperiod of fluorescent light. Seedlings inoculated with distilled water were used as controls. After 3 weeks, the roots were collected and rinsed with tap water. Dark brown lesions were observed in the inoculated mature roots but not in the control roots. To confirm the identity of the pathogen, F. solani strains were reisolated from the lesions and total genomic DNA was extracted with the cetyltriethylammnonium bromide method from the mycelia of the reisolated strains (1). PCR was performed using the fungal universal primers ITS4 (5′-TCCTCCGCTTATTGATATGC-3′) and ITS5 (5′-GGAAGTAAAAGTCGTAACAAGG-3′) to amplify a DNA fragment of approximately 590 bp. The purified PCR products were sequenced (Invitrogen Co., Shanghai, China) and shared 100% sequence identity with each other. A comparison of the sequence (JQ658429.1) by the Clustal_W program (2) with those uploaded in GenBank confirmed with the fungus F. solani (100% sequence similarity to isolate S-0900 from the Great Plains of the United States; EU029589.1). To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. solani causing medical tree peony root rot in China. The existence of this pathogen in China may need to be considered for developing effective control strategies. References: (1). C. N. Stewart et al. Biotechniques 14:748, 1993. (2). J. D. Thompson et al. Nucleic Acids Res. 22:4673, 1994.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document