scholarly journals Molecular detection of Monilinia fructigena as causal agent of brown rot on quince

2012 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jovana Hrustic ◽  
Mila Grahovac ◽  
Milica Mihajlovic ◽  
Goran Delibasic ◽  
Mirko Ivanovic ◽  
...  

Species of the genus Monilinia are important causal agents of fruit rot on pome and stone fruits in Serbia. The pathogen is very harmful, especially on small properties and cottage plantations where intensive control measures are not applied. Quince is important host for the pathogens of this genus. During spring 2010, intensive occurrence of mummified fruits overwintering on branches of the quince was observed. The pathogen was isolated using standard phytopathological methods. Pathogenicity of eight obtained isolates was tested by artificial inoculation of injured apple fruits. Identification was performed according to pathogenic, morphological and ecological properties, and was confirmed by Multiplex polimeraze chain reaction, PCR. All the isolates studied caused brown rot on inoculated apple fruits. The isolates form light yellow colonies with lobate margins, with single-celled, transparent, elliptical or oval conidia in chains, regardless temperature or light presence. Sclerotia are observed in 14 days old cultures. The highest growth rate of most of the isolates is at 27?C and in dark. Based on studied pathogenic, morphological and ecological characteristics, it was found that the Monilinia fructigena is causal agent of brown rot of quince. Using specific primers (MO368-5, MO368-8R, MO368-10R, Laxa-R2) for detection of Monilinia species in Multiplex PCR reaction, the expected fragment 402 bp in size was amplified, which confirmed that the studied isolates belonged to the species M. fructigena.

Author(s):  
I. J. Holb

In the third part of this review, important features of disease management are summarised for brown rot fungi of fruit crops (Monilinia fructigena, Monilinia laxa, Monilinia fructicola and Monilia polystroma). Several methods of brown rot disease management practices were collected and interpreted in five main chapters. In these chapters, details are given about the legislative control measures, the cultural, physical, biological and chemical control methods. Chemical control is divided into two parts: pre-harvest and post-harvest chemical control. In addition, host resistance and fungicide resistance statuses are also included in this part of the review. Finally, future aspects of brown rot disease control are discussed.


Plant Disease ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 91 (5) ◽  
pp. 636-636 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Y. Li ◽  
Z. F. Zhang

Trichosanthes kirilowii Maxim., a species within the gourd family, is cultivated in China for its edible seeds and medicinal roots. Since 2000, heavy losses due to fruit rot have been caused by a new disease with typical anthracnose symptoms, i.e., water-soaked, dark brown-to-black, sunken lesions. Signs of the suspected pathogen were usually seen on near-mature fruits and were especially evident after abundant rainfall. The lesions contained numerous black acervuli with black setae that produced abundant, salmon-colored spore masses under high relative humidity. Dark lesions on leaves and stems could also be found in the field that sometimes led to stem girdling and wilting. Conidia produced in acervuli were 14 to 20 × 3 to 6 μm, straight, cylindrical, hyaline, aseptate, with both ends rounded. Conidiophores were 13 to 22 × 4 to 6 μm, aseptate, and cylindrical, while the setae, usually with three to five septa, measured 60 to 86 × 5 to 6 μm. The pathogen was initially identified as Colletotrichum gloeosporioides on the basis of the morphology (2). In culture, the fungus produced a gray-to-black colony with whitish aerial mycelium on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium. Pathogenicity was tested by inoculating the equator of 10 fruits of T. kirilowii with a 5-day-old mycelia plug from a single-spore colony (0.5 cm in diameter); fruits inoculated with the plugs of PDA medium served as the control. Inoculated fruits were covered with plastic for 24 h to maintain high relative humidity. After 4 days, 100% of the inoculated fruits showed symptoms identical to those observed on T. kirilowii fruit affected in the field, while all fruits inoculated with PDA medium remained free of symptoms. Reisolation of the fungus from fruit lesions confirmed that the causal agent was C. gloeosporioides. To confirm the pathogen to species, the C. gloeosporioides-specific primers CgInt/ITS4 and C. acutatum-specific primers CaInt2/ITS4 (1) were used to amplify the sequence of internal transcribed spacer regions. A fragment of approximately 500 bp was only amplified with primers CgInt/ITS4 and the sequence (GenBank Accession No. AM491334) was 98 to 100% matched to the sequences of several C. gloeosporioides isolates (e.g., GenBank Accession Nos. AJ301919, AB255249, AJ301908), whereas the sequence shares 86 and 91% identity to that of C. orbiculare (GenBank Accession No. AB042308) and C. acutatum (GenBank Accession No. AJ749675), respectively. Thus, we concluded that C. gloeosporioides is the causal agent of anthracnose fruit rot of T. kirilowii. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. gloeosporioides infecting T. kirilowii. References: (1) A. E. Brown et al. Phytopathology 86:523, 1996. (2) B. C. Sutton. The Coelomycetes. CAB International Publishing, New York, 1980.


2020 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 104239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adel Kamel Madbouly ◽  
Kamal A.M. Abo Elyousr ◽  
Ismail Mohamed Ismail

Agronomy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 1814
Author(s):  
Rachid Lahlali ◽  
Ouafae Mchachti ◽  
Nabil Radouane ◽  
Said Ezrari ◽  
Zineb Belabess ◽  
...  

Monilinia fructigena is one of the most important fungal pathogens causing brown rot on apple and is heavily affecting fruit production. The main objective of this study was to screen for potential bacterial isolates with higher antagonistic activity against M. fructigena. Our study focused on the identification of potential bacterial isolates capable of reducing both the mycelial growth of M. fructigena and the disease severity using in vitro and in planta trials, respectively. To achieve this goal, thirteen bacteria, isolated from natural soil, were evaluated for their abilities to produce lytic enzymes (amylase, cellulase and protease), hydrocyanic acid (HCN) and lipopeptides (bacillomycin, fengycin, iturin and surfactin). Further, results from the dual culture method, volatile and bacterial free-cell filtrate bioassays indicated that tested isolates showed a fungicidal activity against the mycelial growth of M. fructigena. Thus, out of the 13 isolates tested, 12 exhibited significant mycelial inhibition (more than 70%) against M. fructigena, while remaining the last isolate displayed only a partial inhibition (up to 43%). Further, 12 of the bacteria isolates displayed an amylase production, 10 showed cellulase production, 11 revealed protease production, while only 2 displayed HCN production. In addition, most bacterial isolates were found to have genes encoding for different lipopeptides: bacillomycin (10), fengycin (3), iturin (11) and surfactin (1). Interestingly, two bacterial isolates, Bacillus amyloliquefaciens B10W10 and Pseudomonas sp. B11W11 were found to be the most effective and displayed the lowest disease severity in planta trial. These two bacteria reduced the brown rot incidence compared to the synthetic fungicide in a semi-commercial large-scale trial. Therefore, our findings suggest that these two later bacterial isolates provide apple protection against M. fructigena via direct and indirect mechanisms. These isolates may be used, therefore, as potential biological control agents (BCAs) in preventive treatment to control brown rot disease on apple fruits.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (7) ◽  
pp. 564
Author(s):  
Lior Gur ◽  
Moshe Reuveni ◽  
Yigal Cohen

Fruit body rot and calyx rot caused by Alternaria alternata f. sp. mali is an important disease of apple worldwide. The disease has recently become severe in cv. Pink Lady apple in Israel to an extent that has never been reported elsewhere in the world. No alternative control measures of the disease except fungicides are known. Here, we show for the first time that dl-β-aminobutyric acid (BABA) induces resistance against Alternaria fruit rot (AFR) in apple fruits in the laboratory and in the orchard. AFR was inhibited in fruits treated with BABA of 1000 μg/mL. BABA did not inhibit spore germination or mycelial growth of the pathogen in vitro (up to 2000 μg/mL). It was most inhibitory when applied 4 days prior to inoculation of detached fruits. BABA inhibited AFR also curatively when applied at 24 h post inoculation. Five other isomers of aminobutyric acid failed to protect the fruits from rot formation. Three field trials in commercial apple orchards proved that BABA was as protective against AFR as the commercial standard fungicidal mixture of azoxystrobin and difenoconazole. This research suggests that BABA may serve as a resistance inducer in apple against AFR. It can be used as an adequate alternative to the currently used fungicides or integrated in disease management programs to reduce fungicide load and buildup of fungicide resistance.


Author(s):  
Mladen Petres ◽  
Marta Loc ◽  
Mila Grahovac ◽  
Vera Stojsin ◽  
Dragana Budakov ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 103 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miloš Stevanović ◽  
Danijela Ristić ◽  
Svetlana Živković ◽  
Goran Aleksić ◽  
Ivana Stanković ◽  
...  

Blackberry cane diseases with the symptoms of necrosis, canker, and wilting are caused by several fungi worldwide. Surveys conducted from 2013 to 2016 in Serbia revealed the occurrence of Gnomoniopsis idaeicola, the causal agent of cane canker and wilting, which was found to be distributed in almost half of the surveyed orchards, in three blackberry cultivars, and with disease incidence of up to 80%. Wide distribution and high disease incidence suggest that G. idaeicola has been present in Serbia for some time. Out of 427 samples, a total of 65 G. idaeicola isolates were obtained (isolation rate of 34.19%). Reference isolates, originating from different localities, were conventionally and molecularly identified and characterized. G. idaeicola was detected in single and mixed infections with fungi from genera Paraconiothyrium, Colletotrichum, Diaporthe, Botryosphaeria, Botrytis, Septoria, Neofusicoccum, and Discostroma, and no diagnostically specific symptoms could be related directly to the G. idaeicola infection. In orchards solely infected with G. idaeicola, blackberry plant mortality was up to 40%, and yield loses were estimated at 50%. G. idaeicola isolates included in this study demonstrated intraspecies diversity in morphological, biological, pathogenic, and molecular features, which indicates that population in Serbia may be of different origin. This is the first record of a massive outbreak of G. idaeicola infection, illustrating its capability of harmful influence on blackberry production. This study represents the initial step in studying G. idaeicola as a new blackberry pathogen in Serbia, aiming at developing efficient control measures.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (5) ◽  
pp. 698-698 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Tomitaka ◽  
T. Usugi ◽  
R. Kozuka ◽  
S. Tsuda

In 2009, some commercially grown tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) plants in Chiba Prefecture, Japan, exhibited mosaic symptoms. Ten plants from a total of about 72,000 cultivated plants in the greenhouses showed such symptoms. To identify the causal agent, sap from leaves of the diseased plants was inoculated into Chenopodium quinoa and Nicotiana benthamiana plants. Local necrotic lesions appeared on inoculated leaves of C. quinoa, but no systemic infection was observed. Systemic mosaic symptoms were observed on the N. benthamiana plants inoculated. Single local lesion isolation was performed three times using C. quinoa to obtain a reference isolate for further characterization. N. benthamiana was used for propagation of the isolate. Sap from infected leaves of N. benthamiana was mechanically inoculated into three individual S. lycopersicum cv. Momotaro. Symptoms appearing on inoculated tomatoes were indistinguishable from those of diseased tomato plants found initially in the greenhouse. Flexuous, filamentous particles, ~750 nm long, were observed by electron microscopy in the sap of the tomato plants inoculated with the isolate, indicating that the infecting virus may belong to the family Potyviridae. To determine genomic sequence of the virus, RT-PCR was performed. Total RNA was extracted from the tomato leaves experimentally infected with the isolate using an RNeasy Plant Mini kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany). RT-PCR was performed by using a set of universal, degenerate primers for Potyviruses as previously reported (2). Amplicons (~1,500 bp) generated by RT-PCR were extracted from the gels using the QIAquick Gel Extraction kit (QIAGEN) and cloned into pCR-BluntII TOPO (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA). DNA sequences of three individual clones were determined using a combination of plasmid and virus-specific primers, showing that identity among three clones was 99.8%. A consensus nucleotide sequence of the isolate was deposited in GenBank (AB823816). BLASTn analysis of the nucleotide sequence determined showed 99% identity with a partial sequence in the NIb/coat protein (CP) region of Colombian datura virus (CDV) tobacco isolate (JQ801448). Comparison of the amino acid sequence predicted for the CP with previously reported sequences for CDV (AY621656, AJ237923, EU571230, AM113759, AM113754, and AM113761) showed 97 to 100% identity range. Subsequently, CDV infection in both the original and experimentally inoculated plants was confirmed by RT-PCR using CDV-specific primers (CDVv and CDVvc; [1]), and, hence, the causal agent of the tomato disease observed in greenhouse tomatoes was proved to be CDV. The first case of CDV on tomato was reported in Netherlands (3), indicating that CDV was transmitted by aphids from CDV-infected Brugmansia plants cultivated in the same greenhouse. We carefully investigated whether Brugmansia plants naturally grew around the greenhouses, but we could not find them inside or in proximity to the greenhouses. Therefore, sources of CDV inoculum in Japan are still unclear. This is the first report of a mosaic disease caused by CDV on commercially cultivated S. lycopersicum in Japan. References: (1) D. O. Chellemi et al. Plant Dis. 95:755, 2011. (2) J. Chen et al. Arch. Virol. 146:757, 2001. (3) J. Th. J. Verhoeven et al. Eur. J. Plant. Pathol. 102:895, 1996.


2021 ◽  
pp. 103-108
Author(s):  
L. Landi ◽  
R.M. De Miccolis Angelini ◽  
S. Pollastro ◽  
D. Abate ◽  
F. Faretra ◽  
...  

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