Diaporthe vaccinii is a fungal pathogen of concern to Vaccinium species, responsible for twig blight disease. This fungus may survive in woody tissues without displaying symptoms, which makes the ...diagnostics more challenging. To provide a rapid and efficient diagnostic tool for D. vaccinii, a new and specific TaqMan real‐time PCR assay was developed using translation elongation factor 1 gene region. The assay was specific to D. vaccinii and did not cross‐react with any other tested Vaccinium pathogens. The sensitivity of the assay was found to be 1 pg of the pathogen DNA in water or in host DNA, which is equivalent to less than 20 hyphal cells. The assay was also used to test infected plant tissues, which determined that the assay can detect the pathogen from symptomatic as well as non‐symptomatic material. Furthermore, D. vaccinii was detected after mixing infected asymptomatic tissue with healthy stem tissues at a proportion of 1:10 by weight. To co‐amplify the D. vaccinii and the plant cytochrome oxidase gene as internal control in a single reaction, a duplex assay was successfully developed without any reduction in sensitivity. Inter‐laboratory testing of the assay showed consistent results, demonstrating that the developed assay is robust and transferrable to other laboratories.
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BFBNIB, DOBA, FZAB, GIS, IJS, IZUM, KILJ, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBMB, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK
For over 140 years, lichens have been regarded as a symbiosis between a single fungus, usually an ascomycete, and a photosynthesizing partner. Other fungi have long been known to occur as occasional ...parasites or endophytes, but the one lichen–one fungus paradigm has seldom been questioned. Here we show that many common lichens are composed of the known ascomycete, the photosynthesizing partner, and, unexpectedly, specific basidiomycete yeasts. These yeasts are embedded in the cortex, and their abundance correlates with previously unexplained variations in phenotype. Basidiomycete lineages maintain close associations with specific lichen species over large geographical distances and have been found on six continents. The structurally important lichen cortex, long treated as a zone of differentiated ascomycete cells, appears to consistently contain two unrelated fungi.
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An analysis of codon bias in six red yeast species Camiolo, Salvatore; Toome‐Heller, Merje; Aime, M. Catherine ...
Yeast (Chichester, England),
January 2019, 2019-01-00, 20190101, Volume:
36, Issue:
1
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
Red yeasts, primarily species of Rhodotorula, Sporobolomyces, and other genera of Pucciniomycotina, are traditionally considered proficient systems for lipid and terpene production, and only recently ...have also gained consideration for the production of a wider range of molecules of biotechnological potential. Improvements of transgene delivery protocols and regulated gene expression systems have been proposed, but a dearth of information on compositional and/or structural features of genes has prevented transgene sequence optimization efforts for high expression levels. Here, the codon compositional features of genes in six red yeast species were characterized, and the impact that evolutionary forces may have played in shaping this compositional bias was dissected by using several computational approaches. Results obtained are compatible with the hypothesis that mutational bias, although playing a significant role, cannot alone explain synonymous codon usage bias of genes. Nevertheless, several lines of evidences indicated a role for translational selection in driving the synonymous codons that allow high expression efficiency. These optimal synonymous codons are identified for each of the six species analyzed. Moreover, the presence of intragenic patterns of codon usage, which are thought to facilitate polyribosome formation, was highlighted. The information presented should be taken into consideration for transgene design for optimal expression in red yeast species.
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BFBNIB, FZAB, GIS, IJS, KILJ, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, SBCE, SBMB, UL, UM, UPUK
Species delimitation is one of the most fundamental processes in biology. Biodiversity undertakings, for instance, require explicit species concepts and criteria for species delimitation in order to ...be relevant and translatable. However, a perfect species concept does not exist for Fungi. Here, we review the species concepts commonly used in Basidiomycota, the second largest phylum of Fungi that contains some of the best known species of mushrooms, rusts, smuts, and jelly fungi. In general, best practice is to delimitate species, publish new taxa, and conduct taxonomic revisions based on as many independent lines of evidence as possible, that is, by applying a so-called unifying (or integrative) conceptual framework. However, the types of data used vary considerably from group to group. For this reason we discuss the different classes of Basidiomycota, and for each provide: (i) a general introduction with difficulties faced in species recognition, (ii) species concepts and methods for species delimitation, and (iii) community recommendations and conclusions.
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EMUNI, FIS, FZAB, GEOZS, GIS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, MFDPS, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, SBMB, SBNM, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK, VKSCE, ZAGLJ
A rust fungus was found on the leaves of
Euphorbia helioscopia
during a field study in Pakistan. Previously,
Melampsora euphorbiae
,
M. euphorbiae
-
gerardianae
and
M. helioscopiae
have been reported ...on
E. helioscopia
, the first two of which are also known from Pakistan. Morphological observations of the newly collected rust samples detected some differences from the previously described
Melampsora
species on
E. helioscopia
. The molecular analysis of the ITS and LSU sequences also detected that the rust is different from the previously reported rusts described from
E. helioscopia
. Based on both morphological comparisons and sequence analysis, the rust is described here as
M. pakistanica
sp. nov. This species could have potential as a bio-control agent against its host plant—
E. helioscopia
—which is a weed of wheat fields in Pakistan and elsewhere in the world.
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EMUNI, FIS, FZAB, GEOZS, GIS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, MFDPS, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, SBMB, SBNM, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK, VKSCE, ZAGLJ
-
(
) is an important fungal pathogen of blueberry, causing mummy berry disease. While the symptoms of the advanced stages of the disease can be obvious, diagnosing its early stages can be ...challenging. To facilitate fast and sensitive screening of asymptomatic or latently infected plant material for
, we developed a specific TaqMan real-time PCR assay targeting the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region. The assay was shown to be specific to
and did not cross react with any of the other tested
species or other blueberry pathogens. Using the multicopy ITS region ensured high analytical sensitivity, enabling very low concentrations of
DNA (0.1 pg) to be detected both in water and host DNA matrix. Comparable results were obtained in interlaboratory testing, showing that the assay is robust, and can be effectively used in other laboratories. Assay sensitivity was also confirmed on infected plant tissue, showing that it is effective in detecting the pathogen in infected asymptomatic stem tissue, as well as infected tissue that was mixed with healthy tissue at a ratio of 1:10 by weight. The assay was duplexed with a plant internal control (cytochrome oxidase gene) for simultaneous amplification of the pathogen and plant internal control in a single reaction. This new diagnostic tool can be used for sensitive and rapid screening of blueberry plants for the presence of
in many different settings, e.g., for breeding programs, research, or biosecurity diagnostics.
In January and March 2019, an inspection of 11 commercial 'Hass' avocado orchards in mid-North and Tauranga (New Zealand) was conducted by NZ Avocado Growers Association Inc. (NZAGA) and the samples ...were sent to Plant Diagnostics Limited for investigation of a newly observed fruit staining symptom termed "tannin stain". Fruit symptoms consisted of areas of minute small spots which coalesced into areas of tear staining associated with water movement over the fruit's surface (Supplementary Fig. 1). Up to seven trees per orchard were sampled targeting symptomatic fruit with the aim of determining the cause of the problem. Fruit was surface disinfected for 4 minutes in 1% sodium hypochlorite solution and sections from lesions were plated on agar medium (prune extract agar) to isolate any plant pathogens. The predominant fungi isolated, represented species in the Colletotrichum acutatum, C. gloeosporioides, and C. boninense species complexes. Since the morphological characters within these complexes overlap (see Supplementary Fig. 2 for examples), the isolates were differentiated by amplification and sequencing of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) gene and, where necessary, the calmodulin (CAL) gene and/or the Apn2-Mat1-2 intergenic spacer region (ApMat) locus (Weir et al., 2012; Rojas et al., 2010). The sequence analysis revealed eight Colletotrichum species comprising C. alienum, C. aotearoa, C. cigarro, C. fioriniae, C. fructicola, C. karstii, C. perseae, and C. siamense. This range included three species that have not previously been recorded in New Zealand: C. fructicola (Cf), C. perseae (Cp), and C. siamense (Cs). Colonies for all these three fungi were white to grey with salmon-coloured and black acervuli. Conidia were aseptate, hyaline, straight, cylindrical, with broadly rounded ends, forming on cylindrical conidiogenous cells. The respective GPDH, CAL, and/or ApMat sequences of the Cf, Cp, and Cs isolates were identical to reference sequences of representative isolates in GenBank (e.g. ApMat: Cf - KX620181, Cp - KX620177, Cs - KP703788). An isolate for each species is stored in the International Collection of Microorganisms from Plants (Cf - ICMP22409, Cp - ICMP22431, Cs - ICMP22411) and sequences are deposited in GenBank (accession numbers MT522858-MT522865). Pathogenicity of each of the newly recorded species was confirmed on freshly picked 'Hass' avocado fruit. After surface disinfection with 1% sodium hypochlorite solution for 5 minutes, fruit was triple washed with sterile water and air dried. Five fruits per species were pin-pricked and inoculated with 10µL of conidial suspension (7 x 106 to 1 x 107 conidia/mL) prepared with sterile water containing Tween 20 (1µL/mL H2O) from 6-day-old cultures grown on PDA. Control fruit was pin-pricked and mock-inoculated with sterile water containing Tween 20 (1µL/mL H2O). All fruit was incubated in moist chambers at 25°C for 7 days. The three Colletotrichum species produced anthracnose symptoms on inoculated fruit whereas no symptoms were observed on control fruit (Supplementary Fig. 3). Each one of the species was successfully re-isolated from symptomatic tissue and identified using the methods described above, fulfilling Koch's postulates. While Cf and Cs have been reported from several hosts and countries to date (Weir et al. 2012), Cp has only been found from avocado in Israel (Sharma et al. 2017) and grape in Japan (Yokosawa et al. 2020). Although a number of species from the C. gloeosporioides species complex, i.e. C. alienum, C. aotearoa, C. cigarro, and C. gloeosporioides have been previously associated with avocado diseases in New Zealand, the detections of Cf, Cp, and Cs represent first records. In this study, eight Colletotrichum species were associated with the "tannin stain" fruit symptoms in New Zealand avocado orchards. The individual contribution of the newly recorded pathogens Cf, Cp, and Cs to the observed disease symptoms was not determined, but their detection highlights the importance of sequence-based identification of Colletotrichum species, as morphology is insufficiently robust to separate cryptic species. Accurate identification of pathogens provides knowledge of species biodiversity that may be useful in biosecurity decision making. Since it has been reported that fungicide treatment efficiencies differ for some closely related Colletotrichum species on grape (Yokosawa et al. 2020), accurate identification might also contribute to establishing effective management strategies.
First report of Puccinia porri in New Zealand Toome-Heller, Merje; Braithwaite, Mark; Alexander, Brett J. R.
Australasian plant disease notes,
20/5, Volume:
17, Issue:
1
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
Open access
Leaf rust on leek and spring onion was found from North and South Islands of New Zealand. Uredinia and telia were present on leaves and morphological examination revealed that spore morphology was ...consistent with the description of
Puccinia porri
. DNA sequence analysis confirmed the morphological identification. This finding represents the first report of
P. porri
in Australasia.
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EMUNI, FIS, FZAB, GEOZS, GIS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, MFDPS, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, SBMB, SBNM, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK, VKSCE, ZAGLJ
The genus
contains several significant plant pathogens, causing wilt and canker disease on a wide range of plant species. There are >40 known species of
, some of which are becoming increasingly ...important in agricultural or natural ecosystems. The diagnostic procedures for most
species rely on time-consuming and labor-intensive culturing approaches. To provide more time-efficient and sensitive molecular diagnostic tools for
, a generic TaqMan real-time PCR assay was developed using the ITS gene. This novel two-probe TaqMan assay amplified DNA from all tested
species. Some nonspecific amplification of a few species from closely related genera was observed under certain conditions; however, these false-positive detections could be ruled out using the additional PCR primers developed for further sequence-based identification of the detected species. The assay was found to be highly sensitive, as it detected 0.2 pg/μl of
DNA in water as well as in host DNA matrix. Further validation with artificially inoculated fig stem tissue demonstrated that the assay was also able to effectively detect the pathogen in infected asymptomatic stem tissue. This newly developed real-time PCR assay has practical applications in biosecurity, conservation, and agriculture; it will enable the detection of
species directly from plant material to facilitate more sensitive screening of imported plant germplasm, and allow rapid tracking of pathogens in the case of disease outbreaks.
Among fungi isolated from healthy root mycobiomes of Populus, we discovered a new endorrhizal fungal species belonging to the rust lineage Pucciniomycotina, described here as Atractiella rhizophila. ...We characterized this species by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), phylogenetic analysis, and plant bioassay experiments. Phylogenetic sequence analysis of isolates and available environmental and reference sequences indicates that this new species, A. rhizophila, has a broad geographic and host range. Atractiella rhizophila appears to be present in North America, Australia, Asia, and Africa and is associated with trees, orchids, and other agriculturally important species, including soybean, corn, and rice. Despite the large geographic and host range of this species sampling, A. rhizophila appears to have exceptionally low sequence variation within nuclear rDNA markers examined. With inoculation studies, we demonstrate that A. rhizophila is nonpathogenic, asymptomatically colonizes plant roots, and appears to foster plant growth and elevated photosynthesis rates.
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