Santos João Evangelista Ávila, Silva Diene Elen Miranda, Vieira Regimara Francisca Bernardo da Silva, Carvalho Alice Maria Silva, Schurt Daniel Augusto, Lima Mary Anne Sousa, Gasparotto Luadir, Lima Cristiano Souza, Silva Christiana Fátima Bruce
Universidade Federal do Ceara, 28121, Fortaleza, CE, Brazil;
Centro de Pesquisa Agroflorestal de Roraima, Roraima, Brazil;
Plant Dis. 2022 May 25. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-05-22-1008-PDN.
Banana (Musa spp.) is the second most-consumed fruit in Brazil, the fourth-largest producer globally, with 7 million tons in 2021 (IBGE 2021). Studies about the morphological and pathogenic characteristics revealed that the etiology of Fusarium wilt in banana cultivars in Brazil had been related to the Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense (Foc) (E.F. Smith) Snyder and Hansen species (Costa et al. 2015; Cordeiro et al. 2016; Araújo et al. 2017). Phylogenetic studies have shown the existence of distinct genetic lineages for Foc, which has come to be called the Fusarium oxysporum Species Complex (FOSC) (O'Donnell et al. 1998; Maryani et al. 2019). Symptoms of Fusarium wilt were observed in banana trees at the headquarters of Embrapa Roraima (02°45'26.89"N and 60°43'52.78"W), Roraima-Brazil, in 2016. Samples were collected and sterilized with 70% ethanol for 30 s, followed by 3% NaClO for 1 min, rinsed three times in sterile distilled water, seeded on potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated at 25 °C for three days. Two isolates obtained from a pure culture (LPPC130) were submitted to the morphological characterization by Leslie and Summerell (2006) protocol. The fungal colony showed vinaceous color, progressing to livid red (Rayner 1970), with a mean diameter of 41 mm (± 0.1) at three days of incubation in a PDA culture medium. The fungus produced abundant macroconidia in spezieller nährstoffarmer agar (SNA) culture medium containing clove leaf (CLA) after 14 days of incubation at 25 °C. The sporodochium conidia presented a falcate shape, moderately curved, with 3 to 5 septa and dimensions ranging from 38.8 (48.0) 56.2 x 3.5 (4.4) 6.0 µm (n=50). The conidia of the aerial mycelium presented ovoid to ellipsoid shape, slightly curved, aseptic, measuring 6.0 (12.0) 18.0 x 2.8 (3.3) 5.0 µm (n=50). The genomic DNA of the isolate was extracted (Murray and Thompson 1980), and fragments of the elongation factor 1-α (TEF1) and RNA Polymerase II (RPB2) gene regions were amplified and sequenced in both directions (O'Donnell et al. 1998; O'Donnell et al. 2010) (GenBank accession numbers: Seq1 OL802918 and Seq2 OL802919). Multiple alignments of the combined dataset of the isolates and representative sequences obtained from GenBank were submitted to phylogenetic analysis with 1,000 bootstrap replicates. The micromorphological characteristics together to phylogenetic inference on the TEF1 and RPB2 genes, allowed a robust analysis, generating 42 more parsimonious trees and making it possible to identify the LPPC130 isolate as Fusarium kalimantanense, a species belonging to the F. oxysporum species complex (FOSC), with 100% bootstrap support (Maryani et al. 2019). The pathogenicity of the isolate was evaluated in five micropropagated seedlings of banana cv. Silk 75 days old, grown in pots with 5 kg of sterile formulation of sand and soil, in 1:1. Seedlings were inoculated by wounding the roots and depositing a suspension of conidia and chlamydospores at 105 spores mL-1. The inoculating of the isolate in 35 micropropagated seedlings of banana was based on Koch's postulates. The seedlings were transplanted into plastic bags (2 kg of sterile formulation: sandy soil and substrate, in 2:1) and inoculated with 10 mL of the chlamydospore suspension (107 CFU mL-1) at transplanting, and after 30 days of transplanting. Seedlings treated only with water were used as control. Evaluation of the symptoms of the disease was carried out 90 days after inoculation, and revealed that the isolate (LPPC130) was pathogenic by inducing the same symptoms of Fusarium wilt. F. kalimantanense was first reported associated with the pseudostems of Musa acuminata var. Pisang Ambon, and proved to be non-pathogenic to cv. Gros Michel and the bananas of the Cavendish group (Maryani et al. 2019). In Brazil, this fungus was recently associated with the Fusarium rot on melon fruits (Araújo et al. 2021); however, this is the first report of its pathogenicity in banana trees cv. Silk.
香蕉(Musa spp.)是巴西第二大消费水果,也是全球第四大生产国,2021年的产量为700万吨(巴西地理统计局,2021年)。关于形态和致病特征的研究表明,巴西香蕉品种枯萎病的病因与尖孢镰刀菌古巴专化型(Foc)(E.F. Smith)Snyder和Hansen种有关(Costa等人,2015年;Cordeiro等人,2016年;Araújo等人,2017年)。系统发育研究表明,Foc存在不同的遗传谱系,后来被称为尖孢镰刀菌种复合体(FOSC)(O'Donnell等人,1998年;Maryani等人,2019年)。2016年,在巴西罗赖马州Embrapa罗赖马总部(北纬02°45'26.89",西经60°43'52.78")的香蕉树上观察到枯萎病症状。采集样本,用70%乙醇消毒30秒,然后用3%次氯酸钠消毒1分钟,在无菌蒸馏水中冲洗三次,接种到马铃薯葡萄糖琼脂(PDA)上,于25°C培养三天。从纯培养物中获得的两个分离株(LPPC130)按照Leslie和Summerell(2006年)的方案进行形态学鉴定。真菌菌落呈葡萄酒色,逐渐变为青灰色(Rayner,1970年),在PDA培养基中培养三天后平均直径为41毫米(±0.1)。在含有丁香叶(CLA)的特殊低营养琼脂(SNA)培养基中,于25°C培养14天后,该真菌产生了大量大分生孢子。分生孢子座分生孢子呈镰刀形,中度弯曲,有3至5个隔膜,尺寸范围为38.8(48.0)56.2×3.5(4.4)6.0微米(n = 50)。气生菌丝的分生孢子呈卵形至椭圆形,微弯,无菌,大小为6.0(12.0)18.0×2.8(3.3)5.0微米(n = 50)。提取分离株的基因组DNA(Murray和Thompson,1980年),对延伸因子1-α(TEF1)和RNA聚合酶II(RPB2)基因区域的片段进行双向扩增和测序(O'Donnell等人,1998年;O'Donnell等人,2010年)(GenBank登录号:Seq1 OL802918和Seq2 OL802919)。将分离株的组合数据集与从GenBank获得的代表性序列进行多重比对,并进行1000次重复的系统发育分析。微观形态特征以及基于TEF1和RPB2基因序列的系统发育推断进行了可靠的分析,生成了42棵更简约的树,并有可能将LPPC130分离株鉴定为加里曼丹镰刀菌,该物种属于尖孢镰刀菌种复合体(FOSC),自展支持率为100%(Maryani等人,2019年)。在5株75日龄的香蕉品种Silk组培苗上评估了该分离株的致病性,这些组培苗种植在装有5千克1:1无菌沙和土壤配方的花盆中。通过损伤根部并接种浓度为105个孢子/毫升的分生孢子和厚垣孢子悬浮液来接种组培苗。基于科赫法则,在35株香蕉组培苗上接种该分离株。将组培苗移植到塑料袋(2千克无菌配方:沙质土壤和基质,2:1)中,并在移植时和移植后30天接种10毫升厚垣孢子悬浮液(107 CFU/毫升)。仅用水处理的组培苗用作对照。接种90天后对病害症状进行评估,结果表明该分离株(LPPC130)具有致病性,可引发与枯萎病相同的症状。加里曼丹镰刀菌首次报道与尖叶蕉变种Pisang Ambon的假茎有关,并被证明对Gros Michel品种和卡文迪什组香蕉无致病性(Maryani等人,2019年)。在巴西,这种真菌最近与甜瓜果实的镰刀菌腐烂有关(Araújo等人,2021年);然而,这是其对香蕉品种Silk致病性的首次报道。