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1.
Phytophthora capsici, the causal agent of Phytophthora blight, is a major concern in vegetable production in Georgia and many other states in the United States. Contamination of irrigation water sources by P. capsici may be an important source of inoculum for the pathogen. A simple method was developed in this study to improve the efficiency of recovering P. capsici from fruits used as baits in irrigation ponds. In contrast to direct isolation on agar plates, infected fruit tissues were used to inoculate stems of pepper seedlings, and the infected pepper stems were used for isolation on agar plates. With isolation through inoculation of pepper stems, the frequency of recovering P. capsici from infected eggplant and pear fruits increased from 13.9% to 77.7% and 8.1% to 53.5%, respectively, compared with direct isolation on agar plates. P. capsici was isolated from seven out of nine irrigation ponds evaluated, with most of the ponds containing both A1 and A2 mating types and a 4:5 ratio of A1 to A2 when isolates from all ponds were calculated. All P. capsici isolates were pathogenic on squash plants, and only a small proportion (8.2%) of the isolates were resistant or intermediately sensitive to mefenoxam. Simple sequence repeats (SSRs) were identified through bioinformatics mining of 55,848 publicly available expressed sequence tags of P. capsici in dbEST GenBank. Thirty-one pairs of SSR primers were designed, and SSR analysis indicated that the 61 P. capsici isolates from irrigation ponds were genetically distinct. Cluster analysis separated the isolates into five genetic clusters with no more than two genetic groups in one pond, indicating relatively low P. capsici genetic diversity in each pond. The isolation method and SSR markers developed for P. capsici in this study could contribute to a more comprehensive understanding of the genetic diversity of this important pathogen.Phytophthora capsici, the causal agent of Phytophthora blight, is a widespread and destructive plant pathogen that causes root rot, crown rot, fruit rot, and foliar blight on many economically important crops in the United States and throughout the world (1). A number of important vegetable crops are susceptible to this pathogen, including peppers, squash, cucumber, watermelon, cantaloupe, zucchini, eggplant, pumpkin, tomatoes, and snap beans. The pathogen causes significant yield reductions and quality losses to vegetable industries and has become a major concern in vegetable production in the United States in recent years. The efficacies of current strategies for management of the disease are limited. No single fungicide has consistently and effectively suppressed losses caused by P. capsici epidemics. While fungicides containing the active ingredient mefenoxam provide some level of control of P. capsici, mefenoxam-resistant isolates that challenge the usefulness of the compound have developed (3, 8).It is critical to understand the ecology and epidemiology of P. capsici in order to design more effective disease management strategies. Studies conducted in recent years indicate that P. capsici survives in irrigation water in the United States, and irrigation water may serve as an important inoculum source. Roberts et al. (14) reported that P. capsici was isolated from tailwater (surface runoff water) in Florida using water filtration and lemon leaf baiting techniques. Gevens et al. (3) used pear and cucumber fruits as baits and isolated P. capsici from irrigation water sources in Michigan. It was unknown, however, if irrigation water sources in Georgia could be significant sources of primary inoculum. Earlier studies using water filtration or direct isolation from water and bottom sediment did not identify P. capsici in surface irrigation ponds in Georgia (16).Since surface water can be a significant source of P. capsici, it is critical to use appropriate methods to isolate the pathogen from irrigation water and to facilitate characterization of the isolates. Fruit, especially pears, is often used as bait to recover Phytophthora spp. from water (3, 21). In comparison to water filtration, the baiting technique is easier and less labor intensive. However, direct isolation from infected fruit bait is often hampered by other microorganisms. Isolation of Phytophthora spp. is often affected by Pythium spp. that overgrow fruit and agar plates. Hence, development of a more efficient isolation method is needed to increase the frequency of P. capsici recovery to facilitate the detection and characterization of isolates associated with water sources.The objectives of this study were to develop an efficient method to isolate P. capsici from irrigation ponds in southern Georgia and to develop simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers to analyze the genetic diversity of P. capsici populations in irrigation ponds. SSRs are tandemly repeated motifs of 1 to 6 bases found in the nuclear genomes of all eukaryotic organisms and are often abundant and evenly dispersed (7). They are highly polymorphic, multiallelic, and codominant and are believed to be a more efficient marker system than restriction fragment length polymorphisms and randomly amplified polymorphic DNAs (18, 23). SSR markers have been derived from publicly available expressed sequence tags (ESTs) of a few plant pathogens, including Phytophthora infestans, Phytophthora sojae, and Magnaporthe grisea (5, 10, 23); however, no SSRs for P. capsici have been developed. Development of EST-SSR markers may provide an effective molecular marker system for analysis of genetic variation within P. capsici populations.  相似文献   

2.
Samples of tomato, lettuce and cucumber submitted for diagnosis to the Plant Protection Centre at the Norwegian Crop Research Institute and samples of soil, water and cucumber collected from greenhouses employing hydroponic cultures were examined for the occurrence of Pythium spp. and Phytophthora spp. Two species of Phytophthora and 16 species of Pythium were identified. Phytophthora cryptogea was found on tomato and lettuce. Phytophthora nicotianae was found on tomato fruit. Phytophthora was not found on cucumbers. Pythium irregulare and Pythium group F were the two most commonly found Pythium species in hydroponically cultivated cucumbers. A pathogenicity test with 56 isolates was performed on cucumber seedlings. The most aggressive species were Pythium aphanidermatum, P. irregulare, Pythium paroecandrum and Pythium ultimum.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Phytophthora citrophthora was inhibited to a greater extent than P. nicotianac var. parasitica by chloramphenicol, hymexazol, PCNB and pimaricin at concentrations used in selective media for the isolation of Phytophthora spp. Reduced concentrations of the antimicrobial components of the selective media to tolerant levels for P. citrophthora markedly increased the recovery of the two brown rot pathogens from soil. Mycelium of both Phytophthora spp. survived in air-dried soil for at least 5 months while mycelium of most Phytophthora spp. do not survive in dry soil. In moist soil, P. nicotianae var. parasitica produced hyphal swellings, sporangia and chlamydospores. P. citrophthora produced hyphal swellings and sporangia, but no chlamydospores. No oospores were produced, even in pairing cultures on agar plates with isolates obtained from several locations of citrus groves andfruits by both species. Sporania were obtained in both species in citrus groves on mycelium mats, in the rhizosphere, in infected leaves and fruits buried at soil depths of 5–35 cm. Numbers of propagules declined during the incubation period, but conside, rable numbers survived throughout the experimental period (6 months). Although P. nicotianae var. parasitica produced chlamydospores while P. citrophthora did not, numbers of surviving propagules recovered from soil after 6 months were comparable with both species. The brown rot pathogens survived in soil both as colonizers of detached leaves and fruits and as parasites in living root tissues.  相似文献   

5.
Baozhen Feng  Peiqian Li 《Genetica》2012,140(10-12):477-484
Phytophthora spp. is a primary pathogen in oomycete, causing economically and environmentally devastating epidemics of plants. Laccases have been found in all domains of life but have not been reported in oomycte. In this paper, laccase genes of Phytophthora spp. were identified in three genomes (Phytophthora capsici, Phytophthora sojae and Phytophthora ramorum). 18 laccase genes were identified in total, including four in P. capsici genome, six in P. sojae genome and eight in P. ramorum genome. Most of the predicted gene models shared typical fungal laccase character, possessing three conserved positions with one cysteine and ten histidine residues at these positions. Phylogenetic analysis illustrated that laccases from Phytophthora clustered into four clades, while fungal laccases clustered together. The results provided the theoretical ground for new hypotheses about the roles laccases in oomycetes and may guide the future research of these enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
Trichoderma harzianum rendered Pythium aphanidermatum and P. myriotylum non-viable in Petri dish dual culture. The Pythium mycelia from such cultures showed natural autofluorescence in the regions of interactions, indicating their death. Non-volatile and volatile fungicidal activities were detected in T. harzianum culture. Lytic activity of β-(l,3)-glucanase was detected on the cell walls of the Pythium spp. There was a significant decrease in the disease incidence when T. harzianum was incorporated into sterile soil, whereas the effect was insignificant in natural soil.  相似文献   

7.
The pathogenicity and growth rate in vivo were assessed on 27 isolates of Pythium spp. recovered from cavity spot lesions on carrots grown in various parts of northwest France. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of isoesterases was used to identify the Pythium spp. involved. Slow-growing isolates were more aggressive than fast-growing ones when inoculated on carrot tap roots. Isoesterase patterns identified the slow-growing isolates as P. violae and P. sulcatum; P. ultimum and P. intermedium were identified among the less aggressive fast-growing isolate group, in which some isolates were also classed as P. sylvaticum or P. irregulare, which have similar electrophoretic profiles. The incidence of Pythium spp. associated with the disease in France is discussed in regard to cavity spot in other countries.  相似文献   

8.
The study was undertaken to identify and characterize Pythium isolates associated with root rot disease of tobacco seedlings as a first step towards developing management strategies for the pathogen. A total of 85 Pythium isolates were collected from diseased tobacco seedlings during 2015–2016 tobacco growing season. The isolates were identified to species level using sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer region. Thereafter, a subset of the isolates was tested for sensitivity to the commonly used fungicides, metalaxyl, azoxystrobin and a combination of fenamidone/propamocarbby growing isolates on Potato Dextrose Agar plates amended with the fungicides. The sequence analysis of the ITS‐rDNA identified Pythium myriotylum as the dominant Pythium species associated with the root rot of tobacco seedlings in Zimbabwe. Pythium aphanidermatum and P. insidiosum were also identified albeit at lower frequencies. Phylogenetic analyses of the ITS region of the P. myriotylum isolates showed little sequence diversity giving rise to one distinct clade. The fungicide sensitivity tests showed that metalaxyl provided the best control of P. myriotylum in vitro, as compared to other fungicides. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first comprehensive study to determine and characterize Pythium species associated with root rot of tobacco in the float seedling production system in Zimbabwe.  相似文献   

9.
The pepper accession Criollo de Morelos 334 is the most efficient source of resistance currently known to Phytophthora capsici and P. parasitica. To investigate whether genetic controls of resistance to two Phytophthora species are independent, we compared the genetic architecture of resistance of CM334 to both Phytophthora species. The RIL population F5YC used to construct the high-resolution genetic linkage map of pepper was assessed for resistance to one isolate of each Phytophthora species. Inheritance of the P. capsici and P. parasitica resistance was polygenic. Twelve additive QTLs involved in the P. capsici resistance and 14 additive QTLs involved in the P. parasitica resistance were detected. The QTLs identified in this progeny were specific to these Phytophthora species. Comparative mapping analysis with literature data identified three colocations between resistance QTLs to P. parasitica and P. capsici in pepper. Whereas this result suggests presence of common resistance factors to the two Phytophthora species in pepper, which possibly derive from common ancestral genes, calculation of the colocation probability indicates that these colocations could occur by chance.  相似文献   

10.
The occurrence of pythiaceous fungi in pot plant cultures grown in ebb and flow bench systems was investigated monthly from May to December, Phytophthora, Pythium and Saprolegnia (in all 351) were isolated from water samples and identified. Nearly all the isolates of Pythium produced zoospores in water. A pathogenicity test involving 15 isolates of Pythium“group P”, and 7 of Pythium“group F” showed that 73 % were pathogenic on cucumber, 66 % on Gerbera, 59 % on lettuce, 50 % on tomato, and 32 % on cress. Control of Pythium and Phytophthora is important in order to improve the health of plants grown in ebb and flow systems.  相似文献   

11.
During a study on soilborne Pythiaceae in the Bavarian Alps, 3 isolates of a papillate Pythium species with aplerotic oospores were found in rhizosphere soil from a declining spruce stand. The isolates showed a unique combination of sporangial and gametangial characters, and could not be assigned to any known species of the genus. They were characterised by a relatively low growth rate, internally proliferating sporangia and extremely variable, monoclinous, sessile or shortly stalked antheridia. Direct germination of sporangia frequently occurred in water culture. Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the ribosomal DNA showed very low levels of similarity to those of all known species of Pythium. This paper describes the isolates as Pythium montanum sp. nov., gives details on its morphology and provides preliminary information on its pathogenicity. Additional molecular evidence for its status as a new species is also provided. Phylogenetic analyses with a set of Pythium spp. showed that P. montanum groups in a clade together with P. vexans, a species whose taxonomical status still remains unclear, and that is considered a ‘border species’ between Pythium and Phytophthora.  相似文献   

12.
In the United States, surface water is commonly used to irrigate a variety of produce crops and can harbor pathogens responsible for food-borne illnesses and plant diseases. Understanding when pathogens infest water sources is valuable information for produce growers to improve the food safety and production of these crops. In this study, prevalence data along with regression tree analyses were used to correlate water quality parameters (pH, temperature, turbidity), irrigation site properties (source, the presence of livestock or fowl nearby), and precipitation data to the presence and concentrations of Escherichia coli, Salmonella spp., and hymexazol-insensitive (HIS) oomycetes (Phytophthora and Pythium spp.) in New York State surface waters. A total of 123 samples from 18 sites across New York State were tested for E. coli and Salmonella spp., of which 33% and 43% were positive, respectively. Additionally, 210 samples from 38 sites were tested for HIS oomycetes, and 88% were found to be positive, with 10 species of Phytophthora and 11 species of Pythium being identified from the samples. Regression analysis found no strong correlations between water quality parameters, site factors, or precipitation to the presence or concentration of E. coli in irrigation sources. For Salmonella, precipitation (≤0.64 cm) 3 days before sampling was correlated to both presence and the highest counts. Analyses for oomycetes found creeks to have higher average counts than ponds, and higher turbidity levels were associated with higher oomycete counts. Overall, information gathered from this study can be used to better understand the food safety and plant pathogen risks of using surface water for irrigation.  相似文献   

13.
This study aimed to identify Pythium and Phytopythium species from weeds collected in vegetable fields and test their pathogenicity. Weeds with symptoms of damping-off, root rot or wilt were sampled in the Brazilian states of Ceará, Goiás and Pernambuco, as well as in the Distrito Federal, for isolation and identification of the causal agents. Once isolated, colonies with typical Pythium and Phytopythium characteristics grew in selective V8 medium. Procedures for species identification included morphology and amplification of the ITS and Cox II regions, which were compared with other accessions available at GenBank. The phylogenetic relationships among the isolates and pathogenicity to their original hosts were evaluated. Six Pythium species were identified: P. aphanidermatum, P. oopapillum, P. orthogonon, P. ultimum var. ultimum, P. myriotylum and P. sylvaticum, and two species of Phytopythium, Phy. chamaehyphon and Phy. oedochilum. In the pathogenicity tests, the 10 weed hosts showed symptoms of damping-off or root rot after inoculation, with exception of Portulaca oleraceae in which none of the isolates was pathogenic. Therefore, common weeds in vegetable fields areas can host different Pythium and Phytopythium species and play an important role in the epidemiology of vegetable diseases, in particular on pathogen survival and population increase.  相似文献   

14.
A root rot and wilt disease of Anigozanthos manglesii (Kangaroo Paw) grown in greenhouses in Israel, for exporting as cut flowers to Europe, was characterized. Pythium myriotylum (Drechs.) and Rhizoctonia solani (Kühn) were the prevalent pathogens in diseased plants collected from commercial greenhouses. Fusarium oxysporum, Fusarium spp. and Myrothecium sp. were also isolated, but P. myriotylum or R. solani were not detected in samples from symptomless plants in tissue cultures (Australian origin) or plants at different stages in the nursery; non‐pathogenic F. oxysporum and Fusarium spp. were detected in several samples. In pathogenicity tests carried out in pots, plant mortality occurred 7 days after inoculation with P. myriotylum. In a field experiment carried out in methyl bromide‐fumigated soil, the incidence of dead plants following inoculation with P. myriotylum alone was 22% 10 days after inoculation, increasing to 78% after an additional 25 days. The incidence of dead plants following inoculation with R. solani alone was only 5% and in plants inoculated simultaneously with both pathogens, disease incidence was 88% 35 days after inoculation. Mortality reached 90–100% in plants inoculated with P. myriotylum, either singly or combined with R. solani 60 days after inoculation, whereas in plants inoculated with R. solani it was 5%. The maximum mortality in plants inoculated with R. solani was 25%, 76 days after inoculation. These results clearly demonstrate that P. myriotylum was the dominant pathogen in the root rot and wilt of A. manglesii.  相似文献   

15.
A membrane filtration test has been developed for the detection of viable zoospores of Pythium species. Zoospore suspensions were filtered through 5 (m nitrocellulose membranes and the membranes incubated overnight in 0.07 m glucose, rifamycin (30 mg litre-1) and pimaricin (100 mg litre-1). Zoospore germlings were detected using a polyclonal antiserum, raised to mycelial surface washings of five Pythium spp., and visualised with Sigma fast red. The assay gave positive results for all Pythium spp. tested and also to zoospores of Phytophthora cryptogea. Of 10 fungal species isolated from commercial irrigation water, two were detected by the polyclonal antiserum in ELISA tests but only one produced detectable zoospore germlings. The latter isolate was later identified as a Pythium sp. Irrigation water samples collected from commercial UK nurseries yielded zoospores of both Pythium and Phytophthora spp. which, using the assay, were positively identified. Results indicated greater sensitivity than was seen with conventional plating methods. This is a test which could be adapted for on-site use in commercial nurseries.  相似文献   

16.
Phytophthora spp. is one of the phytopathogenic Oomycete responsible for many important crop losses. Relevant species are P. infestans (causing potato late blight) and P. capsici (causing blight in pepper). In recent years, the use of conventional fungicides has favoured the appearance of different resistant strains. This study analyses the effect of various compounds on these two Phytophthora species. Those compounds were designed on the basis of known structures of natural compounds to obtain a rational control of these fungal‐like species. All the analysed products showed a fungistatic activity against both strains, one of them reduced mycelial growth by over 46% at 100 p.p.m.  相似文献   

17.
The genus Pythium, with slightly over 280 described species, has been classified traditionally with other filamentous, coenocytic, sporangia-producing fungi as “Phycomyetes”. However, with recent advances in chemical, ultrastructural and molecular studies, Pythium spp. are now considered as “fungus-like organisms” or “pseudo-fungi” and are placed in the Kingdom Chromista or Kingdom Straminopila, distinct from the true fungi of the Kingdom Fungi or Kingdom Mycota. They are widely distributed throughout the world as soil saprophytes or plant pathogens. Because of the warm moist maritime climate, Taiwan, China, is especially rich in Pythium species. To date, 48 species of Pythium have been reported from Taiwan, China, with the dominant species being Py. vexans, Py. spinosum, Py. splendens, Py. aphanidermatum, Py. dissotocum and Py. acanthicum. There is no definite geographical distribution of Pythium spp. in Taiwan, China. Twenty nine species of Pythium have proven to be plant pathogens attacking a wide variety of woody and herbaceous plants primarily causing pre- and post-emergence seedling damping-off, root rot, stem rot and rotting of fruits, tubers and ginger rhizomes, resulting in serious economic losses. The most important plant pathogenic species include Py. aphanidermatum and Py. Myriotylum, which are most active during the hot and wet summer months; whereas Py. splendens, Py. spinosum, Py. ultimum and Py. irregulare cause the greatest damage in the cool winter. Most Pythium spp. are non-specific pathogens, infecting mainly juvenile or succulent tissues. This review attempts to assess the taxonomic position of the genus Pythium and provide details of the historical development of the study of Pythium as pathogens in Taiwan, China, causing diseases of sugarcane, trees, vegetables, fruits, specialty crops and flowering plants, as well as measures to control these diseases. Of special note is the introduction of the S-H mixture which, when used as soil amendment, effectively controls many soil-borne Pythium diseases during the early stages of plant growth. The diversity of Pythium species in Taiwan, China, is discussed in comparison with the situation in the mainland of China and suggestions are made to fully utilize Pythium spp. as agents for biological control, in industry and medicine.  相似文献   

18.
Zingiber zerumbet Smith or wild ginger is remarkable for its inherent resistance to Pythium spp., which cause soft rot disease in Zingiber officinale Rosc. In the present study, various concentrations of extract prepared from Z. zerumbet were screened for its activity against Pythium myriotylum. Microscopic observation of P. myriotylum in presence of Z. zerumbet extract has confirmed the complete lysis of pathogen within 10 h. However, the same treatment with Z. officinale extract was found to have partial antifungal effect even after 24 h due to inability of its metabolites to prevent the growth of P. myriotylum. Due to the antifungal activity, extract from Z. zerumbet was subjected to GC–MS and LC-QTOF-MS which has identified Zerumbone with m/z 219 as the major compound. Further, in vivo study and the subsequent microscopic analysis have confirmed the applicability of extract from Z. zerumbet as a phytomedicine to control rhizome rot in ginger.  相似文献   

19.
Phytophthora quick wilt is a devastating disease of black peppers in Vietnam. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the ribosomal DNA of four Phytophthora samples isolated from the diseased vines in Daknong province of the central highland part of Vietnam was Polymerase chain reaction-amplified, cloned, sequenced and characterised. Database search have showed that they are most closely related to an isolate of Phytophthora tropicalis from Taiwan. Sequence comparisons and phylogenetic analyses based on the ITS region of the four Vietnamese and other GenBank isolates of P. tropicalis and a closely related species, P. capsici, provide strong evidences that the Vietnamese isolates are all different isolates of P. tropicalis.  相似文献   

20.
Bacteria of the genus Bacillus are well known to possess antagonistic activity against numerous plant pathogens. In the present study, 11 strains of Bacillus spp. were isolated from a brackish environment and assayed for biocontrol activity under in vitro and in vivo conditions. Among the 11 isolates tested, nine isolates effectively inhibited the growth of various plant pathogens, namely Phytophthora capsici, Phytophthora citrophthora, Phytophthora citricola, Phytophthora sojae, Colletotrichum coccodes, Colletotrichum gloeosporioides, Colletotrichum acutatum, Rhizoctonia solani, Fusarium solani, Fusarium graminearum, Pyricularia spp., and Monilina spp. The effective isolates were further screened for suppression of Phytophthora blight of pepper plants under greenhouse conditions. The isolate SB10 exhibited the maximum (72.2%) ability to reduce the disease incidence and increased (32.2%) the vigour index of Capsicum annuum L. plants. Antifungal compounds produced by isolate SB10 were highly thermostable (100°C for 30 min). Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight mass spectrometry of the antifungal compounds revealed three lipopeptide complexes, namely the surfactins, the iturins, and the fengycins, which are well-known antifungal compounds produced by Bacillus spp.  相似文献   

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