scholarly journals Survey on Onion Basal Rot Disease Incidence and Evaluation of Aggregatum Onion (Allium cepa L. Var. Aggregatum Don.) Genotypes Against Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. Cepae

Author(s):  
J. Shamyuktha ◽  
J. Sheela ◽  
N. Rajinimala ◽  
B. M. Jeberlinprabina ◽  
C. Ravindran
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew D. Armitage ◽  
Andrew Taylor ◽  
Michelle T. Hulin ◽  
Alison C. Jackson ◽  
Richard J. Harrison ◽  
...  

Fusarium proliferatum is a component of the onion basal rot disease complex. We present an annotated F. proliferatum draft genome sequence, totaling 45.8 Mb in size, assembled into 597 contigs, with a predicted 15,418 genes. The genome contains 58 secondary metabolite clusters and homologs of the Fusarium oxysporum effector SIX2.


Euphytica ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 199-206
Author(s):  
S. A. Bowes ◽  
R. N. Edmondson ◽  
C. A. Linfield ◽  
F. A. Langton

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
jinfeng Zhang ◽  
jianglai Wang ◽  
jinxiu Ma ◽  
Lu Liu ◽  
Tong Shen ◽  
...  

Onion (Allium cepa L.) is one of the most cultivated vegetables throughout the world. With an average annual production quantity of 18 million kg in recent 21 years, China is the world’s biggest onion producer (Hanci F., 2018). Among them, onion is mainly cultivated in the provinces of Gansu, Shandong, Yunnan, Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Henan. A survey in Gansu province in last several years showed that the incidence of onion bulb rot was 30%-80%. In April 2020, bulbs displayed water-soaked, and then rot symptoms observed during storage in Lanzhou City, Gansu Province, China. The initial symptoms of bulb rot disease were yellowish brown, and produced an abundant exudate in the inner bulb scales when cut. Gradually, symptomatic bulbs became soft, watery and decayed. In severe infections, the onions showed total rot of the bulb. Therefore, we sampled some diseased onions and isolated pathogenic bacteria from the junction of lesion along with healthy parts on Luria-Bertani (LB) medium. Three representative single colonies were obtained on LB medium, and the culture characteristics were raised elevation, mucoid texture, round, and smooth with entire margin, the brown at the beginning and turned yellow later, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) observations showed that these isolates were short rod-shaped (Fig. 1A). The physiological and biochemical determination revealed that the isolates were positive for yellow pigment, v-p test, growth at 37 ℃, nitrate reduced, catalase, glucose, sucrose, D (-)-salicin, starch hydrolysis, motility, pellicle. On the contrary, they were negative for indole production, methyl red, lactose, gelatin liquefaction, glycerol, gram staining (Gavini et al., 1989; Nabrdalik et al., 2018). Based on these morphological, physiological and biochemical characteristics, three isolates were initially identified as Pantoea agglomerans (Guo et al., 2020). A representative isolate L1 was selected to extract DNA, and the conserved sequences of the pathogen gene were sequenced according to 23S ribosomal RNA (23S rRNA), DNA gyrase subunit B (gyrB), elongation factor G (fusA) (She et al., 2021) housekeeping gene. The sequence alignment of the 23S rRNA gene (P. agglomerans, MZ314289, 930bp) showed that the homology between the strain L1 and P. agglomerans (CP016889) with similarity of 99.54%, and based on the sequence alignment of gyrB (P. agglomerans, MZ337547, 1189bp) and fusA (P. agglomerans, MZ350961, 1037bp) genes, the similarity with P. agglomerans (FJ617386 and MG845872) was 100%. A phylogenetic analysis based on the 23S, gyrB, fusA housekeeping gene sequences was performed by using the neighbor-joining methods in MEGA 7.0 under the p-distance (Kumar et al, 2016), which included P. agglomerans strains AR1a, TH81, L15, ASB05, P. eucalypti strain LMG 24197, P. dispersa strains BJQ0007 and DSM 32899, P. ananatis strains LMG 20103 and AJ13355, P. vagans strains C9-1, LMG24199 and PV989. The phylogenetic distribution generated five primary phylogroups, and strain L1 formed a clade with the other four P. agglomerans strains (Fig. 2). Thus, the strain L1 was identified as P. agglomerans. To satisfy Koch's postulates, ten onions were divided into two groups, five in each group, and needle punctured wound on the surface of each onion. In the experimental group, 400 μL bacterial suspensions were injected with sterile syringe, and the other five onions were injected with the same amount of sterile distilled water as the negative conrol. Inoculated onions were incubated in the greenhouse incubator (28 ℃, humidity > 80%). After 4 days of incubation, all onions inoculated with strain L1 appeared water-soaked, rot symptoms, and no symptoms were observed in the negative control (Fig. 1B). Subsequently, pathogens were re-isolated from inoculated bulbs and identified as P. agglomerans according to molecular identification described above. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report that the bulb rot disease of stored onion caused by P. agglomerans in China.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew D. Armitage ◽  
Andrew Taylor ◽  
Maria K. Sobczyk ◽  
Laura Baxter ◽  
Bethany P.J. Greenfield ◽  
...  

AbstractA reference-quality assembly of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cepae (Foc), the causative agent of onion basal rot has been generated along with genomes of additional pathogenic and non-pathogenic isolates. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed a single origin of the Foc pathogenic lineage.Genome alignments with other F. oxysporum ff. spp. and non pathogens revealed high levels of syntenic conservation of core chromosomes but little synteny between lineage specific (LS) chromosomes. Four LS contigs in Foc totaling 3.9 Mb were designated as pathogen-specific (PS). A two-fold increase in segmental duplication events was observed between LS regions of the genome compared to within core regions or from LS regions to the core.RNA-seq expression studies identified candidate effectors expressed in planta, consisting of both known effector homologs and novel candidates. FTF1 and a subset of other transcription factors implicated in regulation of effector expression were found to be expressed in planta.


2015 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-50
Author(s):  
MS Mahmud ◽  
MS Monjil

Onion (Allium cepa L.) is an important and familiar spice as well as vegetable crop throughout the world. Storage rot due to various diseases caused by bulb rotting fungi is a major constrain for storing onion year-round in Bangladesh. The fungi associated with onion collected from different markets of Mymensingh, Naogaon and Sathkhira districts of Bangladesh were studied aiming to record the incidence of storage diseases as well as storage variability and conditions on disease incidence of onion. Disease incidence was recorded from storage of the retailers in two local varieties of onion,viz.,Taherpuri, Faridpuri and one Indian variety Pusa Red. Initially, infected onion bulbs were found maximum in Faridpuri and minimum amount was found in Pusa Red. Month-wise disease incidence showed that highest number of infected onion bulbs was found in Pusa Red and lowest number of infected bulbs was found in Taherpuri. Similarly highest disease incidence (%) was recorded in Pusa Red and lowest disease incidence (%) was recorded in Therpuri. Among the different markets average number of fungal infected bulbs was highest in the samples collected from Dhamoirhat bazaar of Naogaon district and lowest in the samples collected from Natun bazaar of Mymensingh district. Highest infected bulbs were found in onions stored in cold room (6°C) followed by Free floor and Bamboo basket. Lowest infected bulbs were found in onions stored in dried sands followed by net-bag and jute bag. Thus, the fungal diseases in storage are higher in large sized onion bulbs than indigenous small sized onions and in cold room (6°C) than net-bag or jute bag.Progressive Agriculture 26:45-50, 2015


2014 ◽  
Vol 50 (No. 1) ◽  
pp. 19-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Türkkan ◽  
I. Erper

The efficacy of twelve sodium salts as possible alternatives to synthetic fungicides for the control of onion basal rot caused by&nbsp;Fusarium oxysporum&nbsp;f.sp.&nbsp;cepae&nbsp;was evaluated.&nbsp;In vitro&nbsp;tests showed that there were significant differences between the inhibitory effects of sodium salts on the mycelial growth (P&nbsp;&le; 0.05) and 2% (w/v) concentrations of sodium metabisulfite and sodium fluoride completely inhibited mycelial growth of the fungus, while other salts did not. Sodium metabisulfite and sodium phosphate monobasic had lower pH values than the other salts. Unlike sodium metabisulfite, sodium phosphate monobasic could not decrease the mycelial growth. The ED<sub>50</sub>, minimum inhibition concentration (MIC), and minimum fungicidal concentration (MFC) values indicated that sodium metabisulfite was more inhibitory to the fungus compared to sodium fluoride. In soil tests, inhibitory effect of sodium metabisulfite on the fungus was higher than that of sodium fluoride, where sodium metabisulfite completely inhibited mycelial growth at even 0.4% concentration.


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