Luecke Noah Carr, Adams Tianjiao, Crawford Kerri
University of Houston, Biology and Biochemistry, 3455 Cullen Blvd, Houston, Texas, United States, 77004;
University of Houston, Biology and Biochemistry, Houston, Texas, United States;
Plant Dis. 2020 Sep 2. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-01-20-0022-PDN.
Brazilian verbena (Verbena brasiliensis, family Lamiaceae) is a highly invasive plant found throughout the southern portion of the United States. As suggested by its name, it originates in South America but has prospered in the US due to its highly ruderal growing pattern and its ability to tolerate drought and disturbance. During the summer of 2019, sixty-four V. brasiliensis plants were growing in the University of Houston's temperature-controlled greenhouse (Houston, TX). Eight plants exhibited symptoms of powdery mildew infection on the stems and adaxial surface of the leaves. White circular powdery colonies with high numbers of aerially dispersing spores were observed on leaves, seemingly uncorrelated with leaf age. Upon examination, chlorosis of leaf tissue was detected in areas of infection. Conidiophores (n=25) were on average 210 μm in length and produced 6 to 9 conidia in true chains. Base-cells of conidiophores branched from hyphae forming right angles and averaged 35 μm long at the base. Conidia were hyaline, ovate, and measured 28-31 × 19-21μm. These structures are typical of the powdery mildew oidium anamorph of the genus Podosphaera. No chasmothecia were observed within colonies.The morphological characteristics and measurements were consistent with those of Podosphaera xanthii (Braun and Takamatsu 2000). Pathogenicity was confirmed by gently rubbing symptomatic V. brasiliensis leaves onto healthy leaves of V. brasiliensis plants (Lee 2013). Fifteen plants were inoculated, and five remained uninoculated to serve as negative controls. Inoculated plants developed powdery mildew symptoms between 6 to 12 days (averaging 10 days), whereas all controls remained disease-free. DNA was extracted from fungal tissue from the original plant, inocula sample, and the newly infected leaves. The internal transcribed region was amplified using the ITS1f and ITS4 primers (White 1990). Three samples, one from the original plant, the inocula, and the reisolated fungi were sequenced, identified using NCBI BLAST, and the resulting sequences were deposited in GenBank (MN818562, (inocula), MN818563 (re-isolate), MN818564 (original)). All three sequences had 98.7% similarity to the P. xanthii on Brazilian verbena reported in South Korea assession number KJ472787 (Cho et al 2014). All three samples were amplified using the mating type primer sets and PCR protocal described in Brewer et al 2011. All three samples were determined to be MAT1-1-1 based on positive and negative control used for MAT1-1-1 and MAT-1-2-1 Positive controls included DNA from confirmed isolates from MAT1-1-1 and MAT-1-2-1 and negative controls were sterile water. Podosphaera xanthii, a common powdery mildew species, has been reported on a large range of important agricultural hosts, especially cucurbits (McCreight 2006). This is the first formal report of P. xanthii in Texas as well as the first report on Brazilian verbena in the United States. While we did not explicitly measure the pathogen's effect on host fitness, infection may result in a reduction in the plant's invasiveness. As Texas is a large producer of cucurbits, this pathogen could impact agriculture in the state. Given the invasive nature of V. brasiliensis in areas of high disturbance, such as agricultural fields and restored prairies, this discovery has broad importance for both agriculture and the ecological conservation of native species. Acknowledgments This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (Award #DEB-1754287), Texas Ecolab, and the University of Houston. References Braun, U., Takamatsu, S. 2000. Phylogeny of Erysiphe, Microsphaera, Uncinula (Erysipheae) and Cystotheca, Podosphaera, Sphaerotheca (Cystotheceae) inferred from rDNA ITS sequences-some taxonomic consequences. Schlechtendalia 4:1-33. Brewer, M. T., Cadle-Davidson, L., Cortesi, P., Spanu, P. D., and Milgroom, M. G. 2011. Identification and structure of the mating-type locus and development of PCR-based markers for mating type in powdery mildew fungi. Fungal Genet. Biol. 48:704-713. Cho, S. E., Park, J. H., Hong, S. H., Kim, B. S., & Shin, H. D. 2014. First report of powdery mildew caused by Podosphaera xanthii on Verbena brasiliensis in Korea. Plant Dis. 98:8, 1159. Lee, H. B. 2013. First report of powdery mildew caused by Podosphaera xanthii (syn. P. fusca)n cocklebur in Korea. Plant Dis. 97(6), 842. McCreight, J. D. 2006. Melon-powdery mildew interactions reveal variation in melon cultigens and Podosphaera xanthii races 1 and 2. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science, 131(1), 59-65.
巴西马鞭草(Verbena brasiliensis,唇形科)是一种极具入侵性的植物,在美国南部各地均有发现。顾名思义,它原产于南美洲,但由于其高度杂草化的生长模式以及耐受干旱和干扰的能力,在美国得以繁荣生长。2019年夏天,休斯顿大学的温控温室(德克萨斯州休斯顿)里生长着64株巴西马鞭草。其中8株在茎和叶片正面表现出白粉病感染症状。在叶片上观察到白色圆形粉状菌落,有大量气生传播的孢子,似乎与叶龄无关。经检查,感染区域的叶片组织出现萎黄病。分生孢子梗(n = 25)平均长度为210μm,以真链形式产生6至9个分生孢子。分生孢子梗的基部细胞从菌丝以直角分支,基部平均长35μm。分生孢子无色透明,卵形,大小为28 - 31×19 - 21μm。这些结构是白粉菌属Podosphaera白粉菌无性型的典型特征。在菌落内未观察到闭囊壳。其形态特征和测量结果与Podosphaera xanthii(Braun和Takamatsu,2000年)一致。通过将有症状的巴西马鞭草叶片轻轻摩擦到健康的巴西马鞭草叶片上,证实了致病性(Lee,2013年)。接种了15株植物,5株未接种作为阴性对照。接种的植物在6至12天(平均10天)内出现白粉病症状,而所有对照均未发病。从原始植物、接种样本和新感染叶片的真菌组织中提取DNA。使用ITS1f和ITS4引物扩增内部转录区域(White,1990年)。对来自原始植物、接种物和重新分离的真菌的三个样本进行测序,使用NCBI BLAST进行鉴定,并将所得序列存入GenBank(MN818562,(接种物),MN818563(重新分离物),MN818564(原始样本))。所有三个序列与韩国报道的巴西马鞭草上的Podosphaera xanthii(登录号KJ472787,Cho等人,2014年)相似度为98.7%。使用Brewer等人(2011年)描述的交配型引物组和PCR方案对所有三个样本进行扩增。基于用于MAT1 - 1 - 1和MAT - 1 - 2 - 1的阳性和阴性对照,所有三个样本均被确定为MAT1 - 1 - 1。MAT1 - 1 - 1和MAT - 1 - 2 - 1的阳性对照包括来自已确认的MAT1 - 1 - 1和MAT - 1 - 2 - 1分离株的DNA,阴性对照为无菌水。Podosphaera xanthii是一种常见的白粉病物种,已在大量重要的农业寄主上被报道,尤其是葫芦科植物(McCreight,2006年)。这是Podosphaera xanthii在德克萨斯州的首次正式报道,也是在美国巴西马鞭草上的首次报道。虽然我们没有明确测量病原体对寄主适合度的影响,但感染可能会导致植物入侵性降低。由于德克萨斯州是葫芦科植物的主要产地,这种病原体可能会影响该州的农业。鉴于巴西马鞭草在农业田地和恢复的草原等高干扰地区的入侵特性,这一发现对农业和本地物种的生态保护都具有广泛的重要意义。致谢 本研究得到了美国国家科学基金会(资助号#DEB - 1754287)、德克萨斯生态实验室和休斯顿大学的支持。参考文献 Braun, U., Takamatsu, S. 2000. Phylogeny of Erysiphe, Microsphaera, Uncinula (Erysipheae) and Cystotheca, Podosphaera, Sphaerotheca (Cystotheceae) inferred from rDNA ITS sequences - some taxonomic consequences. Schlechtendalia 4:1 - 33. Brewer, M. T., Cadle - Davidson, L., Cortesi, P., Spanu, P. D., and Milgroom, M. G. 2011. Identification and structure of the mating - type locus and development of PCR - based markers for mating type in powdery mildew fungi. Fungal Genet. Biol. 48:704 - 713. Cho, S. E., Park, J. H., Hong, S. H., Kim, B. S., & Shin, H. D. 2014. First report of powdery mildew caused by Podosphaera xanthii on Verbena brasiliensis in Korea. Plant Dis. 98:8, 1159. Lee, H. B. 2013. First report of powdery mildew caused by Podosphaera xanthii (syn. P. fusca)n cocklebur in Korea. Plant Dis. 97(6), 842. McCreight, J. D. 2006. Melon - powdery mildew interactions reveal variation in melon cultigens and Podosphaera xanthii races 1 and 2. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science, 131(1), 59 - 65.