Leaf spot disease of Orychophragmus violaceus caused by Alternaria tenuissima in China

Orychophragmus violaceus (L.) O. E. Schulz, also called February orchid or Chinese violet cress, belongs to the Brassicaceae family and is widely cultivated as a green manure and garden plant in China. During the prolonged rainy period in August 2020, leaf spot disease of O. violaceus was observed i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant disease. - 1997. - (2021) vom: 05. Apr.
1. Verfasser: Liu, Dongli (VerfasserIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Li, Jing, Zhang, Saisai, Wang, Xiangjing, Xiang, Wensheng, Zhang, Ji
Format: Online-Aufsatz
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: 2021
Zugriff auf das übergeordnete Werk:Plant disease
Schlagworte:Journal Article Alternaria tenuissima Causal Agent Fungi Orychophragmus violaceus leaf spot disease
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Orychophragmus violaceus (L.) O. E. Schulz, also called February orchid or Chinese violet cress, belongs to the Brassicaceae family and is widely cultivated as a green manure and garden plant in China. During the prolonged rainy period in August 2020, leaf spot disease of O. violaceus was observed in the garden of Northeast Agricultural University, Harbin, Heilongjiang province. One week after the rainy days, the disease became more serious and the disease incidence ultimately reached approximately 80%. The disease symptoms began as small brown spots on the leaves, and gradually expanded to irregular or circular spots. As the disease progressed, spots became withered with grayish-white centers and surrounded by dark brown margins. Later on, the centers collapsed into holes. For severely affected plants, the spots coalesced into large necrotic areas and resulted in premature defoliation. No conidiophores or hyphae were present, and disease symptoms were not observed on other tissues of O. violaceus. To isolate the pathogen, ten leaves with typical symptoms were collected from different individual plants. Small square leaf pieces (5×5 mm) were excised from the junction of diseased and healthy tissues, disinfected in 75% ethanol solution for 1 min, rinsed in sterile distilled water, and then transferred to Petri dishes (9 cm in diameter) containing potato dextrose agar (PDA). After 3 days of incubation at 25 oC in darkness, newly grown-out mycelia were transferred onto fresh PDA and purified by single-spore isolation. Nine fungal isolates (NEAU-1 ~ NEAU-9) showing similar morphological characteristics were obtained and no other fungi were isolated. The isolation frequency from the leaves was almost 90%. On PDA plates, all colonies were grey-white with loose and cottony aerial hyphae, and then turned olive-green and eventually brown with grey-white margins. The fungus formed pale brown conidiophores with sparsely branched chains on potato carrot agar (PCA) plates after incubation at 25 oC in darkness for 7 days. Conidia were ellipsoidal or ovoid, light brown, and ranged from 18.4 to 59.1 × 9.2 to 22.3 µm in size, with zero to two longitudinal septa and one to five transverse septa and with a cylindrical light brown beak (n = 50). Based on the cultural and morphological characteristics, the fungus was tentatively identified as Alternaria tenuissima (Simmons 2007). Genomic DNA was extracted from the mycelia of five selected isolates (NEAU-1 ~ NEAU-5). The internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) was amplified and sequenced using primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al., 1990). Blast analysis demonstrated that these five isolates had the same ITS sequence, and the ITS sequence of representative strain NEAU-5 (GenBank accession No. MW139354) showed 100% identity with the type strains of Alternaria alternata CBS916.96 and Alternaria tenuissima CBS918.96. Furthermore, the translation elongation factor 1-α gene (TEF), RNA polymerase II second largest subunit (RPB2), and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPD) of representative strain NEAU-5 were amplified and sequenced using primers EF1-728F/EF1-986R (Carbone and Kohn 1999), RPB2-5F2/RPB2-5R (Sung et al., 2007), and Gpd1/Gpd2 (Berbee et al., 1999), respectively. The sequences of RPB2, GPD, and TEF of strain NEAU-5 were submitted to GenBank with accession numbers of MW401634, MW165223, and MW165221, respectively. Phylogenetic trees based on ITS, RPB2, GPD, and TEF were constructed with the neighbour-joining and maximum-likelihood algorithms using MEGA software version 7.0. The results demonstrated that strain NEAU-5 formed a robust clade with A. tenuissima CBS918.96 (supported by 99% and 96% bootstrap values) in the neighbour-joining and maximum-likelihood trees. As mentioned above, strain NEAU-5 produced seldomly branched conidial chains on PCA plates. The pattern is consistent with that of A. tenuissima (Kunze) Wiltshire, but distinct from that of A. alternata which could produce abundant secondary ramification (Simmons 2007). Thus, strain NEAU-5 was identified as A. tenuissima based on its morphology and phylogeny. Pathogenicity tests were carried out by inoculating five unwounded leaves with a conidial suspension of strain NEAU-5 (approximately 106 conidia/ml) on five different healthy plants cultivated in garden, and an equal number of leaves on the same plants inoculated with sterilized ddH2O served as negative controls. Inoculated and control leaves were covered with clear plastic bags for 3 days. After 6 days, small brown and irregular or circular spots were observed on all leaves inoculated with conidial suspension, while no such symptoms were observed in the control. The tests were repeated three times. Furthermore, the pathogenicity tests were also performed using 2-month-old potted plants in a growth chamber (28 oC, 90% relative humidity, 12 h/12 h light/dark) with two repetitions. Five healthy plants were inoculated by spraying 20 ml of a conidial suspension of strain NEAU-5 (approximately 106 conidia/ml) onto unwounded leaves. Five other healthy plants were inoculated with sterilized ddH2O as controls. After 7 days, similar symptoms were observed on leaves inoculated with strain NEAU-5, whereas no symptoms were observed in the control. The pathogen was reisolated from the inoculated leaves and identified as A. tenuissima by morphological and molecular methods. In all pathogenicity tests, A. tenuissima could successfully infect unwounded leaves of O. violaceus, indicating a direct interaction between leaves and A. tenuissima. It is known that high humidity and fairly high temperatures can favor the epidemics of Alternaria leaf spot (Yang et al., 2018), and this may explain why severe leaf spot disease of O. violaceus was observed after prolonged rain. Previously, it has been reported that Alternaria brassicicola and Alternaria japonica could cause leaf blight and spot disease on O. violaceus in Hebei and Jiangsu Provinces, China, respectively (Guo et al., 2019; Sein et al., 2020). Although these pathogens could lead to similar disease symptoms on the leaves of O. violaceus, it is easy to distinguish them by the morphological characteristics of conidiophores and ITS gene sequences. To our knowledge, this is the first report of A. tenuissima causing leaf spot disease of O. violaceus in China
Beschreibung:Date Revised 22.02.2024
published: Print-Electronic
Citation Status Publisher
ISSN:0191-2917
DOI:10.1094/PDIS-10-20-2287-PDN