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Plant Pathology
Edited by Christian Joseph R. Cumagun
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Contents
Preface IX
Preface
Plant pathology is an applied science which deals with the nature, causes and control
of plant diseases in agriculture and forestry. The vital role of plant pathology in
attaining food security and food safety for the world cannot be overemphasized.
The book begins with taxonomy of fungal pathogens using Lucid key, a multi-access
computer based key for identification for Cercosporoids and a comprehensive review
of Rhizoctonia solani anastomosis groups and subgroups in Chapters 1 and 2
respectively. Correct identification of the disease causing agent is a prerequisite to any
successful plant disease management.
Recent advances in molecular genetics and biology have provided clues as to how
plant pathogens act as elicitors to induce defence reactions on the plant. The
phytobacterial type VI secretion system, specific only for Gram negative bacteria is a
known virulence factor of plant pathogenic bacteria. For an environmentally sound
management strategy, novel elicitors from Botrytis cinerea have shown potential
disease control in cut flower production. The rice blast pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae is
known to encode effector proteins which were functionally identified to elucidate the
pathogenicity mechanism of the fungus. Fungal adhesion to host cells, a crucial stage
for the initiation of infection, can be prevented by treatment with enzymes or
gelatinolytic bacteria. These topics are discussed in Chapters 3-6.
Molecular tools have greatly enhanced our capability to detect and diagnose plant
pathogens. Chapter 7 describes the different molecular techniques developed
including detection of fungicide resistance. Chapter 8 covers the quantification of
Fusarium biomass by PCR and ELISA, a direct tool that does not require the time
consuming isolation and culture of the fungus.
Integrated disease management is the best approach for a sustainable crop protection.
Chapters 9 deals with available disease management strategies for gray mold of castor
bean while Chapter 10 focuses specifically on the effect of nutrition and soil properties
on pathogens of tropical trees. Integrated disease management program for Fusarium
in banana and Pseudomonas in olive trees are described in Chapter 11 and 12. Chapter
X Preface
13 deals with disease resistance, considered to be the most effective, economical and
environmentally-friendly plant disease management strategy.
Dr. Christian Joseph R. Cumagun,
Crop Protection Cluster, College of Agriculture,
University of the Philippines Los Baos,
Philippines
1
1. Introduction
The genus Mycosphaerella Johanson, contains more than 3000 names (Aptroot 2006), and has
been linked to more than 30 well-known anamorphic genera (Crous 2006a and 2006b). It has
a worldwide distribution from tropical and subtropical to warm and cool regions (Crous
1998; Crous et al. 2000 and 2001). Mycosphaerella, however, has been associated with at least
27 different coelomycete or hyphomycete anamorph genera (Kendrick and DiCosmo, 1979),
23 of which were accepted by Crous et al. (2000). More than 3000 names have already been
published in Cercospora (Pollack, 1987). The genus Cercospora Fresen., which is one of the
largest genera of hyphomycetes, has been linked to Mycosphaerella teleomorphs (Crous et al.,
2000). Cercospora was first monographed by Chupp (1954), who accepted 1419 species.
Subsequent workers such as, F.C. Deighton, B.C. Sutton and U. Braun divided Cercospora in
to almost 50 different genera which are morphologically similar and distinct with each other
(Crous and Braun, 2003).
Cercosporoid fungi are a collective term for a group of fungi belonging, to the genus
Cercospora and its allied genera, namely Pseudocercospora, Passalora, Asperisporium,
Corynespora, Cladosporium. Differences among them are based mainly on a combination of
characters that include the structure of conidiogenous loci (scars) and hila, presence or
absence of pigmentation and ornamentation in conidiophores and conidia, geniculate or
non-geniculate conidiophore, and rare presence of additional or unique features such as
knotty appearance of conidiophores.
Cercospora Fresen. is one of the largest genera of Hyphomycetes. Saccardo (1880) defined
Cercospora as having brown conidiophores and vermiform, brown, oliivaceous or rarely
subhyaline conidia. Deighton continuously studied the Cercospora species (Deighton, 1967a,
1967b, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1979, 1983, and 1987) and reclassified numerous species into
several allied genera based mainly on two distinct taxonomic categories: thickened conidial
scars occur in the Cercospora and in allied genera such as, Passalora and Stenella, while
unthickened scars are characteristics of the genera Pseudocercospora and Stigmina.
2 Plant Pathology
Cercosporoid fungi are commonly associated with leaf spots (Wellman, 1972) ranging from
slight, diffuse discolorations to necrotic spots or leaf blight (Shin and Kim, 2001).
Cercosporoid fungi can also cause necrotic lesions on flowers, fruits, bracts, seeds and
pedicels of numerous hosts in most climatic regions (Agrios, 2005). They are responsible for
great damages to beneficial plants. Furthermore, other than important pathogens of major
agricultural crops such as cereals, vegetables, ornamentals, forest trees, grasses and many
others species are also known to be hyperparasitic to other plant pathogenic fungi (Goh and
Hsieh, 1989).Cercosporoid fungi are known to cause some of the economically important
diseases worldwide. One of the most important and common diseases associated with this
fungus is the black sigatoka caused by Mycosphaerella fijiensis which was first discovered and
considered to have caused epidemics in the Valley of Fiji (Stakman and Harrar, 1957).
The Cercosporoid fungi of Philippines are insufficiently known. There have been no
comprehensive studies on this group of fungi in Philippines. Welles (1924 and 1925) worked
with physiological behavior of Philippine Cercosporas on artificial media and the extent of
parasitism. There were 87 species of Cercospora reported in the Philippines from 1937
onwards (Quimio and Abilay, 1977). Teodoro (1937) had enumerated 65 species of
Cercospora in the Philippines. In most cases, however, the causal species have only been cited
but not characterized. No attempt was made to determine the host range of each of the
species. Naming of the species was based mainly on Chupps monograph (Chupp, 1953),
which together with Vasudevas book (Vasudeva, 1963) book on Indian Cercosporae, as the
main reference books used by Quimio and Abilay (1977).
Identification of fungal plant pathogens is commonly done using one of several well-
illustrated dichotomous keys by Ellis (1971 and 1976), Sutton (1980), Hanlin (1990), and
Barnett & Hunter (1998). Multi-access keys for identifying biological agents are very useful,
especially for the non-specialist, as it is not necessary to be able to detect all of the fine
distinctions usually found in dichotomous keys. The disadvantage of those printed keys is
that they require the user to be able to scan a series of tables of numbers and select those that
are common to the specimen being examined (Michaelides et al. 1979; Sutton 1980). This task
is ideally suited to computers. The Lucid system developed by the Centre for Biological
Information Technology (CBIT), University of Queensland (Norton 2000) allows
development of multi-access computer-based keys that can also incorporate graphics and
text. The result is a very powerful tool. Although some keys have previously been
developed for fungi using Lucid, they have generally been for specific groups such as
rainforest fungi of Eastern Australia (Young 2001). The main purpose in developing these
Lucid identification systems has been to contribute to taxonomic capacity building in two
ways - by enabling identification keys to be easily developed and by increasing the
availability and usefulness of these keys by making them available on CD or via the
Internet. A Lucid was used for identifying genera for identifying genera of plant pathogenic
Cercosporoid fungi of Philippine crops. The key was comprised of many characters, which
has the potential for being rather cumbersome. For simplicity, the characters were placed in
groups and states relating to the structures like the morphology of conidiophores, the
stromata, conidia, and fruiting bodies and the names of host family and genus.
The primary objective of this study was to identify Cercosporoid fungi of the Philippines,
use recent taxonomic information to amend or rename species, formulate taxonomic keys,
and develop Lucid key for identification. An existing computer based software was applied
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 3
to the development of morphological Lucid key for their identification. For this purpose,
field collections were conducted from 2007 to 2009. Microscopic studies on the association of
Cercosporoid species to the diseased leaves were carried out at the Postharvest Pathology
Lab, Crop Protection Cluster, College of Agriculture, University of the Philippines Los
Baos (UPLB). The field collection was confined mostly within UPLB campus, particularly
propagation farm and medicinal plant gene bank, vegetable farm of the Crop Science
Cluster, UPLB, the production farm at the Jamboree site, production farm at International
Rice Research Institute (IRRI), and some residential gardens in Los Baos, Laguna.
Key to Cercosporoid Genera (Crous and Braun, 2003).
1. Conidiogenous loci inconspicuous or subdenticulate, but always unthickened and not
darkened or subconspicuous, i.e., unthickened, but somewhat refractive or rarely very
slightly darkened, or only outer rim slightly darkened and refractive (visible as minute
rings)-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Pseudocercospora
1. Conidiogenous loci conspicuous, i.e., thickened and darkened throughout, only with a
minute central pore-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2
2. with verruculose superficial secondary mycelium; conidia amero- to
scolecosporous, mostly verruculose-----------------------------------------------------Stenella
2. If superficial secondary mecelium present, hyphae smooth or almost so------------3
3. Conidia hyaline or subhyaline, scolecosporous, acicular, obclavate-cylindrical, filiform,
usually pluriseptate---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Cercospora
3. Conidia pigmented or, if subhyaline, conidia non-scolecosporus, ellipsoid-ovoid, short
cylindrical, fusoid and only few septa-----------------------------------------------------------Passalora
4. Conidiogenous loci protuberant, with a central convex part (dome) surrounded
by a raised periclinal rim, conidia in long, often branched chains or solitary, smooth
to verruculose ------------------------------------------------------------------------Cladosporium
4. Conidiogenous loci conspicuously thickened, conidia non-scolecosporous,
ellipsoid-ovoid, short subcylindrical, aseptate or only with few septa--------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Asperisporium
5. Conidia contain from 4-20 pseudo-crosswalls (pseudosepta), the base of the conidium
(hilum) conspicuously thickened------------------------------------------------------------- Corynespora
5. Conidia without septa or with one or a few transverse septa, conidiophores apical portion
sometimes branched------------------------------------------------------------------- Periconiella
Further descriptions of the genera and species belonging to the genus, as they were
associated from the collections were presented. The last column of the table indicates
whether the collection is considered a first record or has already been reported.
2. Genus Cercospora
Cercospora Fresen. (Crous and Braun, 2003).
Stromata lacking to well developed, subhyaline to usually pigmented; conidiophores
mononematous, macronematous, solitary to fasciculate, arising from internal hyphae or
stomata, erect, continuous to pluriseptate, subhyaline to pigmented; conidiogenous loci
conspicuous, thickened and darkened, planate; conidia solitary to catenate, scolecosporous,
obclavate, cylindrical, filiform, acicular, hyaline, smooth or almost so, hila thickened and
darkened (Crous and Braun, 2003).
Type species: Cercospora penicillata (Ces.) Fresen.
4 Plant Pathology
In the present study, 48 Cercospora diseases were reported. Among them, 20 species were
now considered under a compound species Cercospora apii s. lat. (Table 1) and 28 under
Cercospora s. str. which is host specific with a host range confined to species of a single
host genus or some allied host genera of a single family (Table 2).The reported genus
Cercospora was introduced by Fresenius with Cercospora penicillata as the type species.
Since then over 1000 species were reported and characterized and were compiled in the
book Monograph of the Genus Cercospora by Chupp (1953). He proposed a broad
concept for the genus, simply noting whether hila were thickened or not, and if conidia
were pigmented or not, single or in chains. Recently Crous & Braun (2003) recognized
four true cercosporoid genera, viz. Cercospora, Pseudocercospora Speg., Passalora Fr. and
Stenella Syd., and several other morphologically similar genera, based on molecular
sequence analyses and a reassessment of morphological characters. They represented a
compilation of more than 3000 names that have been published or proposed in Cercospora,
of which 659 are presently recognized in this genus, with a further 281 being referred to
C.apii s.lat. They amended the species C. apii and it is now a compound species, referred to
as C. apii s.lat. It infects hundreds of plant species. Cercospora apii s.lat. is characterized by
having solitary to fasciculate, usually long, brown, septate conidiophores with
conspicuously thickened and darkened conidiogenous loci and long, acicular, hyaline,
pluriseptate conidia formed singly. Cercospora s.str is characterized by having stromata,
with numerous, densely arranged rather short conidiophores, small conidiogenous loci,
and obclavate-cylindrical conidia with truncate base (Table 2).
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
2-15 in a divergent
fascicle, pale to hyaline, acicular,
olivaceous brown, smooth walled,
multiseptate, not straight, base-
Amaranthus
Cercospora branched, straight truncate, apex- CALP
viridis lacking FR
amaranti to slightly acute, 11707
(Amaranth)
geniculate, scars hilum thickened
conspicuously and darkened, 40-
thickened, 35-200 x 200 x 2-4.5 m
4-5.5 m
hyaline, solitary,
dense fascicle, pale
acicular, straight
to olivaceous
to curved,
brown, almost
Anona septate, base
uniform in colour
Cercospora squamosa obconically CALP
present and width, not AR
anonae (Sugar truncate, tip 11734
geniculate, slightly
apple) acute, hilum
branched, septate,
thickened and
large scar present,
darkened, 40-200
20-180 x 2-5 m
x 1.5-3 m
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 5
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
2-5 in a fascicle or
borne singly, pale hyaline, acicular,
to very pale brown straight to mildly
in colour, paler curved,
and more narrow indistinctly
towards the apex, multiseptate,
Cercospora Begonia sp. CALP
lacking straight or acute at the apex, FR
begoniae (Begonia) 11676
geniculate, septate, truncate at the
truncate at the base, hilum
apex, scars conspicuously
conspicuously thickend, 50-260 x
thickened 30-180 x 2.5-4m
3-5 m
2-5 in a fascicle,
hyaline, solitary,
pale to olivaceous
acicular/
brown, straight to
cylindro-
slightly bent or
obclavate,
curved, geniculate,
straight-curved,
multiseptate,
Cucurbita multiseptate,
Cercospora simple, CALP
moschata lacking apex-subacute to FR
citrullina occasionally 11675
(Squash) obtuse, base-
swollen at some
subtruncate or
points, subtruncate
rounded, hilum
at the apex, scars
thickened and
conspicuously
darkened, 20-200
thickened, 35-250 x
x 2-3.5 m
4-6 m
6 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
hyaline, solitary,
2-15 in a fascicle,
acicular,
pale to very pale
multiseptate,
Momordica brown, straight to
apex- acute to
Cercospora charantia mildly geniculate, CALP
lacking subacute, base- AR
citrullina (Bitter multiseptate, scars 11688
subtruncate or
gourd) conspicuously
rounded, hilum
thickened, 20-180 x
thickened, 45-190
4-5 m
x 2-4 m
hyaline, solitary,
acicular to
2-5 in a fascicle,
obclavato-
pale olivaceous
cylindric, straight
brown, width
to mildly curved,
Luffa irregular, straight
multiseptate,
Cercospora cylindrica to slightly curved, CALP
lacking obtuse apex, FR
citrullina (Sponge mildly geniculate, 11728
truncate base,
gourd) septate, conidial
hilum
scars conspicuous
conspicuously
and thickened, 40-
thickened and
250 x 4-5.5 m
darkened, 45-200
x 3.5-5 m
10-30 in a
divergent fascicle,
hyaline, acicular/
brown to dark
cylindro-bclavate,
brown at the base
straight - curved,
and apical portion
multiseptate,
Phaseolus rather paler,
Cercospora apex- subacute, CALP
lunatus present straight to mildly AR
cruenta base-subtruncate 11710
(Lima bean) geniculate,
to truncate, hilum
multiseptate, scars
thickened and
large and
darkened, 50-250
conspicuously
x 2-3.5 m
thickened, 40-150x
5-6.5 m
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 7
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
2-5 in a fascicle,
hyaline, solitary,
pale to olivaceous
cylindrical to
brown, straight to
acicular, straight
mildly curved,
to mildly curved,
Euphorbia sometimes
multiseptate,
Cercospora heterophylla branched, rarely CALP
lacking obconically FR
euphorbiae (Milk geniculate, 11724
truncate base,
weed) multiseptate, large
obtuse tip, hilum
conidial scars at
thickened and
the subtruncate
darkened, 40-120
tip, 25-100 x
x 3-4.5 m
4.5-6 m
hyaline, acicular,
divergent fascicle,
straight to mildly
pale olivaceous
curved,
brown in colour,
indistinctly
apex subtruncate,
Impatiens multiseptate,
1-4 septate, rarely
Cercospora balsamina acute to subacute CALP
present branched, straight AR
fukushiana (Balsam at the apex, 11678
to flexuous or
plant) truncate at the
geniculate, scars
base, hilum
medium sized and
conspicuously
thickened, 40-150 x
thickend, 40-250 x
3-4 m
3-4 m
Hyaline, solitary,
1-10 in a fascicle, acicular, straight
pale to medium to slightly
brown, straight or curved,
Dhalia
Cercospora mildly geniculate multiseptate, CALP
variabilis lacking AR
grandissima with thickened apex-acute, base- 11677
(Dahlia)
scars, subtruncate truncate, hilum
at the apex,60-100 thickened and
x 4-5 m darkened, 50-250
x 2-4 m
8 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
3-15 in a loose
hyaline, solitary,
fascicle, brown to
acicular to
deep brown
obclavate-
throughout,
cylindric,
irregular in width,
substraight to
straight to
mildly curved, 2-
Hydrangea slightlybcurved,
Cercospora 13 septate, non- CALP
macrophylla present geniculate, not AR
hydrangeae constricted,apex- 11733
(Milflores) branched, 2-5
subacute ,base-
septate, obtuse to
truncate, hilum
subtruncate at the
conspicuously
apex, conidial
thickened,
scars small and
darkened, 35-150
conspicuous, 25-
x 3-4 m
210 x 4-5 m
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
2-5 in a divergent
fascicle, pale
hyaline, solitary,
brown to brown,
acicular,
straight to slightly
substraight to
bent or curved,
mildly curved,
Lagenaria geniculate,
multiseptate,
Cercospora vulgari occasionally CALP
lacking acute to obtuse at FR
lagenariae (Bottle branched, 11700
the apex, truncate
gourd) multiseptate,
at the base, hilum
obtuse to
thickened and
subtruncate at the
darkened, 40-210
apex, conidial
x 2-5 m
scars conspicuous,
60-250 x 3-6 m
2-5 in a loose
fascicle, pale to
hyaline, solitary,
olivaceous brown,
acicular, smooth
septate,
walled, straight,
Laportea unbranched,
Cercospora base-truncate, CALP
crenulata lacking straight, smooth FR
laporticola apex-obtuse, 11696
(Laportea) walled, large
hilum thickened
conidial scars
and darkened, 40-
conspicuously
250 x 3-4.5 m
thickened, 30-90 x
5-7.5 m
10 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
2-15 in a fascicle,
hyaline, solitary,
pale olivaceous
acicular,
brown, straight,
multiseptate
rarely septate and
Cercospora Morus alba base-truncate, CALP
lacking geniculate, FR
moricola (Mulberry) tip-acute hilum 11690
unbranched, scars
thickened and
conspicuously
darkened, 40-150
thickened,10-50 x
x 2-3.5m
4-5.5 m
2-5 in a fascicle, hyaline, solitary,
pale olivaceous to acicular, straight
medium brown, to mildly curved,
paler toward the multiseptate,
Nicotiana tip, not branched, acute to subacute
Cercospora CALP
tabacum lacking multiseptate, at the apex, AR
nicotianae 11701
(Tobacco) mildly-geniculate, truncate at the
scars large and base, hilum
conspicuously thickened and
thickened, 20-100 x darkened, 25-250
3-6.5 m x 2-4.5 m
hyaline, solitary,
2-20 in a fascicle, acicular/obclavat
pale to medium e, straight to
dark olivaceous mildly curved,
Zinnia brown, not apex-acute /
Cercospora CALP
elegans lacking branched, straight subacute at base- AR
zinniae 11704
(Zinnia) or geniculate, scars truncate to
conspicuously subtruncate,
thickened, 15-200 x hilum thickened
4-6 m and darkened, 20-
160 x 2-4 m
Reference: Chupp (1954); Ellis (1971, 1976); Guo & Hsieh (1995); Guo et al. (1998); Hsieh & Goh(1990);
Saccardo (1886); Shin & Kim (2001); Vasudeva (1963).
* AR= already reported, FR= first record.
Table 1. List and descriptions of formerly reported Cercospora species that were reclassified
in this study as Cercospora apii s.lat.
Some former species of Cercospora that are morphologically different from C.apii s.lat., are
now considered to Cercospora s.str. As far as known, Cercospora s.str. are host specific or
with a host range confined to species of a single host genus or some allied host genera of a
single family. This phenomenon is constantly being addressed via molecular studies
(Crous et al., 2000, 2001). Cercospora s.str. is characterized by having stromata, with
numerous, densely arranged rather short, solitary to fasciculate, subhyaline to light or
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 11
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
hyaline,
small to
solitary,
moderately long
obclavate-
fascicle,
cylindrical,
subhyaline,
short conidia
straight,
occasionally
subcylindrical to
Adiantum fusoid, septate,
moderately
Cercospora phillipense thin walled, CALP
present geniculate to AR
adiantigena (Maiden smooth, apex 11715
sinuous,
hair fern) obtuse, base
unbranched,
short
multiseptate,
obconically
conidial scar
truncate, hilam
thickened and
thickened and
darkened, 25-150 x
darkened, 40-
4-10 m
90 x 4-8 m
hyaline,
acicular to sub-
2-15 in a divergent
cylindrical,
fascicle, light
straight to
brown, straight to
rarely curved,
rarely curved,
Basella alba unbranched,
Cercospora unbranched, thick
(Vine smooth walled, CALP
basellae- present walled, septate, FR
spinach- septate, with 11735
albae geniculate, with
green) truncate to
rounded apex,
obconically
conidial scars
truncate base
distinct, 30-85 x 4-5
and obtuse
m
apex, 20-80 x 2-
5 m
12 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
hyaline,
1-10 in a fascicle,
acicular,
pale olivaceous
obclavate,
brown, fairly
straight to
uniform in color
slightly curved,
Basella albae and width, not
Cercospora in distinctly
(Vine branched, straight CALP
basellae- present multiseptate, NHR
spinach- or mildly 11674
albae rounded apex,
purple) geniculate with
truncate at the
thickened conidial
base with a
scars, sparingly
thickened
septate, 30-75 x 4-6
hilum, 15-70 x
m
1-4 m.
hyaline,
2-15 in a divergent
solitary,
fascicle, emerging
acicular to
through stomata,
cylindrical,
pale olivaceous to
straight to
medium brown,
mildly curved,
not branched,
multiseptate,
Brassica multiseptate,
Cercospora acute to CALP
pekinensis present mildly geniculate, AR
brassisicola rounded at the 11705
(Pechay) but rarely
apex, truncate
geniculate in the
at the base,
upper portion,
hilum
scars large and
thickened and
conspicuously
darkened, 25-
thickened, 20-200 x
250 x 2-4.5 m
3-5.5 m
2-15 in a fascicle,
pale olivaceous to hyaline,
medium brown, acicular,
uniform in colour straight to
and width but curved,
paler the indistinctly
Brassica
Cercospora attenuated tips, multiseptate, CALP
campestris present FR
brassicicola rarely branched, subacute to 11703
(Mustard)
multiseptate, acute at the
mildly geniculate, apex, truncate
conidial scars at at the base, 25-
the subtruncate 200 x 2-5 m
tip, 25-400 x 3.5-6
m
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 13
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
densely
fasciculate, pale to hyaline,
medium dark acicular,
brown, straight to
multiseptate, curved,
Dolichos geniculate, rarely indistinctly
Cercospora CALP
lablab present branched, apex- multiseptate, FR
canescens 11732
(Lab bean) truncate, conidial apex-acute,
scars base-truncate,
conspicuously thickened
thickened, 2-4 m hilum, 25-200 x
wide, 20-200 x 3- 2.5-5.5 m
6.5 m
hyaline,
filiform to
3-15 in a fascicle or
cylindric,
borne singly, pale
solitary,
olivaceous brown,
straight to
paler tips, upper
Daucus slightly curved,
Cercospora portion slightly CALP
carota present 1-5 septa, AR
carotae geniculate, 11730
(Carrote) rounded base,
straight, scars
obtuse apex,
conspicuous
hilum
thickened, 20-40 x
thickened and
2.5-4 m
darkened, 25-
95 x 3.5-5.5 m
hyaline,
2-7 in a fascicle or acicular to
borne singly, pale obclavate,
to medium straight to
olivaceous brown, curved,
paler at the apex, indistinctly
Corchorus
Cercospora septate, not multiseptate, CALP
olitorius present FR
corchori branched, obtuse at the 11694
(Jute)
geniculate, apex, base-
subtruncate at tip, obconically
with thickened truncate ,
conidial scars, 40- thickened
230 x 2-5.5 m hilum, 25-165 x
2.5-5 m
14 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
5-15 in a fascicle,
pale to medium
hyaline,
brown, slightly
acicular to
paler and more
obclavate,
narrow towards
straight to
Corchorus the tip, springly
Cercospora curved, CALP
acutangulus present septate, not FR
corchori indistinctly 11697
(saluyot) branched, mildly
multiseptate,
geniculate, almost
base truncate,
straight, large
tip acute, 40-
conidial scar at
220 x 2.5-5 m
subtruncate tip, 30-
120 x 4-5.5 m
hyaline,
acicular to
2-15 in a fascicle,
obclavato-
pale olivaceous
cylindrical,
brown, uniform in
multiseptate,
colour, usually
straight to
Datura straight, septate,
Cercospora mildly curved, CALP
metal lacking not branched, FR
daturicola tip acute to 11729
(Datura) conidial scars
subacute and
conspicuously
base truncate,
thickened and
hilum
darkened, 30-85 x
thickened and
3.5-5.5 m
darkened, 50-
150 x 3-4.5 m
hyaline,
2-5 in a small
cylindrical to
fascicle, pale to
obclavate,
olivaceous brown,
straight to
straight to mildly
mildly curved,
curved, not
Eluesine multiseptate,
Cercospora branched, CALP
indica lacking obconically FR
eluesine sometimes mildly 11720
(Dogs tail) truncate base,
geniculate,
rounded tip,
multiseptate, large
hilum
conidial scars
thickened and
conspicuous, 25-85
darkened, 40-
x 4.5-6 m
120 x 3-4.5 m
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 15
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
5-15 in a fascicle,
hyaline,
pale olivaceous
solitary,
brown, uniform in
cylindro-
colour and width,
obclavate,
paler the tips,
subobtuse tip,
smooth wall,
obconically
Euphorbia straight to mildly
Cercospora truncate base, CALP
sp. present curved, not FR
euphorbiae straight to 11721
(Euphorbia) branched, not
curved,
geniculate,
multiseptate,
multiseptate,
hilum
medium conidial
thickened and
scar thickened and
darkened, 40-
darkened, 15-65 x
100 x 3.5-5 m
4-6 m
hyaline,
densely
solitary,
fasciculate,
acicular to
olivaceous brown,
cylidro-
uniform in colour
obclavate,
and width, paler
acute to
the tips, smooth
rounded tip,
Gendarussa wall, straight to
Cercospora obconically CALP
vulgaris present mildly curved, not FR
gendarussae truncate base, 11722
(Gendarussa) branched, rarely
straight to
geniculate,
curved,
multiseptate, large
multiseptate,
conidial scar
hilum
thickened and
thickened and
darkened, 20-120 x
darkened, 45-
4-5.5 m
180 x 3-4 m
hyaline,
2-10 in a fascicle, cylindric or
pale to olivaceous acicular,
brown, slightly straight to
paler and more mildly curved,
Ocimum narrow towards indistinctly
Cercospora CALP
sanctum lacking the tip, septate, not multiseptate, FR
guatemalensis 11725
(Basil) branched, straight base truncate
to slightly curved, to obconically
conidial scar truncate, tip
conspicuous , 25- rounded to
100 x 4-5.5 m conic, 45-120 x
2.5-4 m
16 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
1-10 in a fascicle,
pale to medium hyaline,
brown, paler and acicular,
more narrow sometimes
Helianthus
Cercospora toward the tip, curved, CALP
annuus present FR
helianthicola geniculate, rarely multiseptate, 11718
(Sunflower)
branched, large base truncate,
conidial scar at tip acute, 40-
subtruncate tip, 25- 130 x 2-3 m
100 x 3-5 m
2-10 in a fascicle,
medium dark hyaline,
brown, uniform in acicular,
colour, straight to
multiseptate, not curved,
Cercospora Glycine max branched, mildly indistinctly CALP
present FR
kikuchii (Soybean) geniculate, multiseptate, 11698
subtruncate at the hilum
apex, scars large thickened and
and conspicuously darkened, 45-
thickened, 35-200 x 300 x 2.5-5 m
4-6 m
hyaline,
5-8 in a small
solitary,
fascicle, pale
acicular-
olivacous brown,
obclavate,
paler upwards,
subacute tip,
smooth wall,
truncate base,
Pogostemon straight to mildly
Cercospora straight to CALP
cablin lacking curved, not FR
labiatacearum curved, 11706
(Patchouli) branched,
multiseptate,
geniculate, large
hilum
conidial scar
thickened and
thickened and
darkened, 45-
darkened, 45-300 x
180 x 4.5-5.5
5-5.5 m
m
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 17
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
hyaline,
2-10 in a fascicle or
solitary,
borne singly, pale
acicular to
olivaceous brown,
obclavate,
slightly paler and
straight to
narrower towards
Cercospora Lactuca curved,
the apex, CALP
lactucae- sativa present indistinctly AR
multiseptate, not 11699
sativae (Lettuce) multiseptate,
branched, springly
subacute at the
geniculate,
apex,
conidial scar at
subtruncate at
subtruncate tip, 25-
the base, 20-200
100 x 4-5 m
x 3-5 m.
hyaline,solitary
2-5 in a small , acicular,
fascicle, pale to straight to
olivaceous brown, mildly curved,
multiseptate, not multiseptate,
branched, straight base-
Mentha
to curved, mildly subtruncate to
Cercospora arvensis CALP
lacking geniculate towards obconically FR
menthicola (Apple 11691
the apex, smooth truncate. Apex-
mint plant)
walled, conidial acute to
scars rounded,
conspicuously hilum
thickened, 35-120 x thickened and
4-6.5 m darkened, 40-
120 x 2-4 m
2-5 in a fascicle,
medium
hyaline,
olivaceous brown,
solitary,
closely septate, not
Mikania obclavate,
branched, straight
cordifolia truncate at the
Cercospora to mildly CALP
(Climbing lacking base, acute the FR
mikaniicola geniculate, smooth 11716
hemp tip, hilum
walled, conidial
weed) thickened and
scars
darkened, 40-
conspicuously
80 x 4-9 m
thickened, 50-150 x
4-6.5 m
18 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
3-12 in a fascicle,
pale to medium hyaline,
olivaceous brown, acicular, acute
multiseptate, to subacute at
Euphorbia rarely branched, the apex,
Cercospora CALP
pulcherrema present straight, mildly truncate at the AR
pulcherrimae 11702
(Poinsettia) geniculate, base with a
conidial scars thickened
conspicuously hilum, 30-130 x
thickened, 20-110 x 3-4 m
4-6 m
hyaline,
acicular to
densely obclavate,
fasciculate, pale straight to
olivaceous brown, mildly curved,
fairly uniform in indistinctly
Ricinus colour and width, multiseptate,
Cercospora communis sparingly septate, subacute to CALP
present AR
ricinella (Castor not branched, subobtuse at 11719
bean) geniculate, large the apex,
conidial scar subtruncate to
present at truncate at the
subtruncate tip, 20- base, hilum
250 x 4-8 m thickened and
darkened, 20-
100 x 2-4 m
hyaline,
2-5 in a small cylindric,
fascicle, olivaceous straight to
brown, slightly curved,
paler towards the indistinctly
Sesamum apex, multiseptate, multiseptate,
Cercospora CALP
orientale lacking rarely branched, acute at the AR
sesame 11723
(Sesame) straight, mildly apex, truncate
geniculate, large at the base,
conidial scar hilum
present, 20-110 x 4- thickened and
5.5 m darkened, 30-
150 x 2-4.5 m
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 19
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
2-15 in a fascicle,
pale to very pale
olivaceous brown, hyaline,
uniform in colour, acicular,
1-4 septate, width straight to
Sesbania
Cercospora irregular, not curved, CALP
sesban present FR
sesbaniae branched, mildly multiseptate, 11695
(Sesbania)
geniculate, truncate base,
conidial scar tip obtuse, 25-
conspicuously 60 x 2.5-3.5 m
thickened, 20-65 x
2.5-5.5 m
2-15 in a fascicle,
hyaline,
dark brown in
cylindro-
colour, paler the
obclavate,
tip, irregular
straight to
width, not
mildly curved,
Cassia alata branched, upper
Cercospora septate, base CALP
(Ring worm lacking portion mildly FR
simulate obconically 11726
bush) geniculate,
truncate, tip
multiseptate,
obtuse, hilum
medium conidial
thickened and
scar at subconic
darkened, 30-
tip, 50-280 x 3.5-6
100 x 2.5-4 m
m
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
hyaline,
densely narrowly
fasciculate, very obclavate or
pale olivaceous, filiform,
cylindric, erect or straight, 3-10
sinuous, rarely septate, acute
Cercospora Tagetes septate or at the apex,
CALP
tagetis- erecta present geniculate, obconic or long FR
11714
erectae (Marygold) truncate or obconically
rounded at the truncate at the
apex, conidial base; hilum
scars thickened thickened and
conspicuous, 10-50 darkened, 25-
x 2-3 m 90 x 2-3.5 m
3. Genus Pseudocercospora
Pseudocercospora Speg (Crous & Braun, 2003).
Stromata lacking to well developed, usually pigmented; conidiophores are pigmented, pale
olivaceous to medium dark brown with conidiogenous loci inconspicuous, unthickened and
not darkened but somewhat refractive or rarely very slightly darkened, or only outer rim
slightly darkened and refractive; conidia subhyaline to pigmented, solitary or catenulate,
scolecosporous, hila unthickened and not darkened (Table 3).
Type species: Pseudocercospora vitis (Lev.) Speg.
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 21
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
densely
fasciculate, pale
to medium
olevaceous pale olivaceous to
brown, uniform brown, obclavate
in colour, 0-3 to cylindric,
septate, straight to mildly
sometimes curved, septate,
constricted at the acute to subobtuse
Pseudocerc Abelmoschus
lacking septa, irregular in at the apex, CALP
ospora esculentus AR
or small width or slightly obconic to 11746
abelmoschi (Okra)
clavate, simple or obconicaly
branched, truncate at the
sparingly base, hilum
geniculate, unthickened and
sinuous, rounded inconspicuous, 25-
or conically 80 x 2.5-4 m
truncate at the
apex, 10-50 x 3-5
m
subhyaline to very
10-25 in a pale olivaceous,
divergent obclavate with
fascicle, gradual
emerging attenuation,
through the hyaline to pale
Pseudocerc Alternan-
stromata, pale brown, straight to
ospora thera
brown, straight mildly curved, tip CALP
alternanth nodiflora present FR
to curved, not subobtuse, base 11736
erae- (Alternen-
branched, obconic, 3-12
nodiflorae thera)
sometimes septate, sometimes
geniculate, constricted at the
septate, scars septa, hilum
inconspicuous, unthickened and
10-55 x 4-5 m inconspicuous, 30-
110 x 2.5-4.5 m
22 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
4-15 in a
divergent
fascicle, pale pale olivaceous,
olivaceous to cylindric to
olivaceous obclavato-
brown, longer cylindric, straight
ones curved, to mildly curved,
sharply bent or 2-8 septate,
Pseudocerc Solanum undulate, subobtuse to
ospora nigrum branched, broadly rounded CALP
lacking AR
atro- (Black night septate, at the apex, 11679
marginalis shade) sometimes sharply obconic or
slightly obconically
constricted at the truncate at the
some septa, base, hilum
rarely geniculate, unthickened and
conic at the apex, not darkened, 15-
scars 90 x 2.5-5 m
inconspicuous,
10-50 x 3-5 m
10-40 in a
subhyaline,
divergent
solitary, filiform to
fascicle, pale
narrowly
olivaceous
obclavate, straight
brown to brown ,
to mildly curved,
irregular in
Pseudocerc Impatiens septate, subacute
well width,
ospora balsamina at the apex, CALP
develop substraight to AR
balsa- (Balsam truncate to 11741
ed mildly curved,
minicola plant) obconically
not geniculate,
truncate at the
not branched,
base, hilum
multiseptate,
unthickened and
conidial scars
not darkened; 30-
inconspicuous,
70 x 1.5-3 m
15-50 x 2-3 m
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 23
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
5-25 in a fascicle,
cylindric, pale to pale olivaceous
medium brown, brown, mostly
uniform in cylindrical, rarely
colour and obclavate, straight
width, straight to to slightly curved,
curved, not septate, subobtuse
Pseudocerc Blumea
branched, to broadly CALP
ospora balsamifera lacking AR
septate, mildly rounded at the 11739
blumeae (Sambong)
geniculate, apex, subtruncate
rounded to to long obconically
truncate at the truncate at the
apex, conidial base, hilum
scars unthickened. 30-
unthickened, 15- 110 x 3.5-5.5 m
70 x 4-5 m
densely
pale olivaceous,
fasciculate, pale
obclavate-
olivaceous,
cylindric, straight
cylindrical,
to mildly curved,
septate,
indistinctly 3-6
branched, rarely
Pseudocerc Bixa septate, subobtuse
geniculate, CALP
ospora orellanae lacking at the apex, FR
conically 11738
bixicola (Bixa) obconic or
rounded at the
obconically
apex, conidial
rounded at the
scars
base, hilum
unthickened or
unthickened, , 30-
inconspicuous,
60 x 2-3 m
15-40 x 2.5-4 m
medium to dark
brown, arise subhyaline to pale
singly, uniform or medium
in colour, olevaceous,
irregular in cylindric to
width, obclavato-
multiseptate, cylindric, straight
Pseudocerc Borreria
lacking branched, to mildly curved, CALP
ospora micrantha FR
or small slightly 3-9 septate, base 11740
borreriae (Borreria)
geniculate, obconic to
curved to obconically
tortuous, small truncate, hilum
spore scars at unthickened and
bluntly rounded inconspicuous, 30-
tip, 35-220 x 3-5.5 90 x 2.5-5 m
m
24 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
pale olivaceous
2-20 in a fascicle,
brown, obclavate
emerging
or obclavato-
through stomata,
cylindric, straight
olivaceous
Chrysanthe to mildly curved,
Pseudocerc brown,
mum multiseptate,
ospora cylindrical, CALP
morifolium present rounded at the FR
chrysanthe septate, rarely 11742
(Chrysanth apex, obconically
micola geniculate, very
emum) truncate at the
rarely branched,
base, hilum
scars
unthickened and
inconspicuous,
inconspicuous, 25-
15-40 x 3-5 m
100 x 3-5 m
subhyaline to very
pale olivaceous
dense fascicle,
brown, cylindric or
subhyaline to
cylindro-obclavate,
pale olivaceous
straight to mildly
brown, straight
curved,
to sinuous or
multiseptate,
Pseudocerc Phaseolus mildly
subacute to obtuse CALP
ospora lunatus small geniculate, AR
at the apex, 11737
cruenta (Lima bean) occationally
sharply obconic or
branched,
obconically
septate, conic at
truncate at the
the apex, scars
base, hilum
inconspicuous,
unthickened and
15-60 x 3-5 m
inconspicuous, 25-
130 x 2-5 m
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 25
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
narrowly
small fascicle, obclavate, very
very pale pale olivaceous,
olivaceous to straight to curved,
brown, sparingly indistinctly
Pseudocerc Lantana
septate, not multiseptate, base CALP
ospora camara lacking FR
geniculate, long obconically 11747
formosana (Lantana)
straight to truncate, tip
undulate, scars subacute, hilum
inconspicuous, unthickened and
25-40 x 3-4 m inconspicuous, 30-
100 x 2.5-3.5 m
loosely
fasciculate
usually 5-15 per
subhyaline to pale
fascicle, pale
olivaceous,
olivaceous to
cylindric to
very pale
cylindro-obclavate,
olivaceous
straight to mildly
brown, uniform
curved, rounded
Pseudocerc Lycopersicon well in color, straight
to obtuse at the CALP
ospora esculentum develop to sinuous, tip AR
apex, obconically 11748
fuligena (Tomato) ed rounded or
truncate,
truncate,
multiseptate,
sometimes
hilum
geniculate, not
unthickened, not
branched,
darkened, 25-110 x
septate, conidial
2-4 m
scars
unthickened, 15-
45 x 3-5 m
2.8 in a small
subhyaline to pale
fascicle, pale
olivaceous brown,
olivaceous
cylindro-obclavate,
brown, straight
straight to mildly
Pseudocerc Gmelina to mildly
curved, base CALP
ospora arborea lacking geniculate, AR
attenuated, tip 11754
gmelinae (Yemen) smooth,
subacute, hilum
unbranched,
unthickened and
septate, scars
inconspicuous, 30-
inconspicuous,
80 x 3-4.5 m
30-50 x 3-4.5 m
26 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
numerous, pale
olivaceous, pale olivaceous,
straight or subcylindric to
slightly sinuous, slightly obclavate,
sometimes straight or slightly
Jasminum slightly curved, smooth,
Pseudocerc
grandifloru geniculate, thin-walled, CALP
ospora present FR
m smooth, simple, obtuse at the apex, 11745
jasminicola
(Jasmine) septate, shortly tapered at
subtruncate at the base, hilum
the apex, 5-30 x unthickened and
2-4 m, conidial inconspicuous, 18-
scars 60 x 1.5-2.5 m
unthickened
subhyaline,
densely cylindric to
fasciculate, pale narrowly
to very pale obclavate, straight
Ocimum
Pseudocerc olivaceous to mildly curved,
basilicum CALP
ospora lacking brown, conidial septate, subacute FR
(Sweet 11744
ocimicola scar unthickened to subobtuse at the
basil)
and apex, truncate at
inconspicuous, the base, hilum
10-40 x 3-5 m unthickened 25-60
x 3-4 m
densely
subhyaline,
fasciculate, pale
obclavate, straight
olivaceous to
to slightly curved,
yellowish brown,
septate, rounded at
Pseudocerc Pachyrrhizus not branched,
the apex, CALP
ospora erosus small septate, mildly FR
obconocally 11743
pachyrrhizi (Turnip) geniculate,
truncate base with
conidial scar
unthickened
visible but not
hilum, 35-60 x 3-
thickened, 10-35
5.5 m
x 2.5-4 m
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 27
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
pale olivaceous
brown, cylindric,
5-20 in a fascicle, sometimes
emerging from obclavato-
Pseudocerc Sesbania stromata, cylindric, straight
CALP
ospora sesban lacking septate, rounded or slightly curved, FR
11752
sesbanicola (Sesbania) at the apex, scars septate, rounded at
inconspicuous, the apex, truncate
15-65 x 3-4 m at the base, hilum
unthickened, 18-30
x 3-4.5 m
5-10 in a fascicle,
olivaceous to pale
pale olivaceous
brown, cylindric to
brown, paler
cylindro-obclavate,
towards the apex,
Pseudocerc straight to slightly
straight or
ospora Solanum curved, obtuse at
geniculate, CALP
solani- melongena present the apex, FR
sometimes 11749
melon- (Eggplant) obconically
branched,
genicola truncate at the
septate, conidial
base, hilum visible
scars visible but
but not thickened,
not thickened, 30-
30-100 x 3.5-5 m
60 x 3.5-4.5 m
2-15 in a fascicle ,
subhyaline to very
pale olivaceous
pale olivaceous,
brown, simple or
narrowly
branched,
obclavate or
straight or
filiform, straight to
slightly
slightly curved,
undulate,
Pseudocerc Synedrella indistinctly
septate, CALP
ospora nodiflora lacking multiseptate, FR
sometimes 11750
synedrellae (Syndrella) subacute at the
constricted at the
apex, obconically
septa, not
truncate at the
geniculate,
base, hilum
rounded or
unthickened and
conical at the
inconspicuous, 15-
apex, 5-30 x 2-4
90 x 2-3 m
m
28 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
subhyaline to pale
olivaceous,
pale olivaceous,
cylindric to
borne singly or
obclavate, straight
densely
to mildly curved,
fasciculate,
Pseudocerc Vitex well septate, acute to
straight, not CALP
ospora nigundo develop subacute at the AR
branched, not 11751
viticis (Lagundi) ed apex and
geniculate, 5-35 x
obconically
2-3.5 m,
truncate at the
conidial scar
base, hilum
inconspicuous
unthickened 18-50
x 2.5-3.5 m
Reference: Chupp (1954); Ellis (1971); Guo & Hsieh (1995); Guo et al. (1998); Hsieh & Goh (1990);
Saccardo (1886); Shin & Kim (2001); Vasudeva (1963); Yen & Lim (1980).
* AR= already reported, FR= first record.
Table 3. List and descriptions of Pseudocercospora species found in this study.
4. Genus Passalora
Passalora Fr. (Crous & Braun, 2003).
Stromata absent to well developed; conidiophores are solitary or loosely to densely fasciculate,
unbranched or branched, continuous to pluriseptate, subhyaline to pigmented,
conidiogenous loci conspicuous, scars thickened and darkened-refractive, conidia solitary to
catenate, simple or branched, amerosporous to scolecosporous, pale to distinctly pigmented
(if subhyaline, conidia non-scolecosporous), smooth to finely verruculose, with few septa,
hila thickened and darkened-refractive, more or less truncate (Crous & Braun, 2003).
Type species: Passalora bacilligera (Mont. & Fr.)
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
Passalora Amaranthus well densely fasciculate, pale olivaceous,
amaranthae viridis developed pale to olivaceous cylindric or
(Amaranth) brown, obclavato-
multiseptate, cylindric, straight
straight or slightly to slightly
curved, not curved, 3-7
CALP
branched, septate, bluntly NS
11757
moderately rounded at the
geniculate, apex, obconic at
conspicuously the base , small
thickened small thickened hilum,
conidial scars,25- 25-65 x 3.5-6.5 m
100 x 3.5-6.5 m
Passalora Bougainvil lacking 5-8 in a small pale to olivaceous
bougainvilleae lea fascicle, pale to brown, solitary,
spectabilis olivaceous brown, smooth, slightly
(Bougain- smooth, straight to curved,
villa) geniculate, cylindrical to
aseptate, conidial obclavato-
scar conspicuous cylindric, 3-6 CALP
and darkened, 10- septa, truncate at AR
11758
75 x 5-7.5 m the base and
rounded at the
apex, hilum
thickened and
darkened, 30-65 x
5-10 m
Passalora Manihot well densely fasciculate, pale olivaceous,
henningsii esculenta developed subhyaline to pale cylindric,
(Cassava) olivaceous brown, straight to
uniform in colour slightly curved,
and width, 1-3 3-6 septate,
septate, straight or bluntly rounded CALP
slightly curved, not at the apex, AR
11756
branched, mildly obconic at the
geniculate, conidial base with a small
scars conspicuously thickened hilum,
thickened, 15-50 x 25-60 x 4-6.5 m
3.5-5 m
30 Plant Pathology
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
Passalora Arachis well densely fasciculate, solitary,
personata hypogea developed pale olivacious, subhyaline to
(Peanut) smooth, slightly or pale olivaceous,
strongly filiform or
geniculate, straight obclavate or
or slightly curved, obclavato-
not branched, 0-3 cylindric, usually
septate, conidial very finely
scars rough-walled,
conspicuously obtuse or
CALP
thickened, 20-90 x broadly rounded AR
11755
3.5-6.5 m at the apex,
truncate or
obconically
truncate at the
base, hilum
conspicuously
thickened and
darkened, 2-10
septate, 20-80 x
4-7.5 m
Passalora Tinospora present densely fasciculate, subhyaline to
tinosporae reticulate subhyaline to very very pale,
(Maka- pale, not branched, cylindrical to
buhay) geniculate, obclavate,
multiseptate, aseptate, straight CALP
AR
conidial scars to curved, 11760
conspicuous and at obconically
bluntly rounded truncate base,
tip, 25-110 x 3.5-5.5 subobtuse tip,
m 10-45 x 4-6 m
Reference: Chupp (1954); Ellis (1971, 1976); Guo & Hsieh (1995); Guo et al. (1998); Hsieh & Goh(1990);
Katsuki (1965); Saccardo (1886); Shin & Kim (2001); Vasudeva (1963).
* NS= new species, AR= already reported, FR= first record.
Table 4. List and descriptions of different species of Passalora that were formerly classified as
Cercospora species in the Philippines.
A species associated with Amaranthus viridis was believed to be new. Its characteristics are
close to P.henningsii in terms of having amphigenous colonies and with shorter
conidiophores (15-50 m). However, its characteristics are different from others, having
darker septation on conidia, and its association with a new host that warrants a new species.
The proposed new species was Passalora amaranthae on Amaranthus viridis.
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 31
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
pale olivaceous
brown,
obclavate
pale olivaceous
Moringa conico-truncate
Asperisporium well brown, straight, CALP
oleifera at the base, AR
moringae developed geniculate, 10-35 11761
(Moringa) verruculose
x 4-6 m
walled, mostly
1-2 septate, 20-
45 x 5.5-7.5 m
Reference: Chupp (1954); Ellis (1971); Ellis & Holliday (1972).
*AR= already reported. FR= first record.
Table 5. Characteristics of Asperisporium moringae associated with leaf spot of Moringa
oleifera.
hyaline or rather pale olive or olivaceous brown, without septa or with one or a few
transverse septa.
Type species: Periconiella velutina (Wint.) Sacc.
In the present study, only one Periconiella lygodii on Lygodium japonicum was reported
(Table 6). Four species of Periconiella have been reported to occur on ferns (Braun, 2004).
He noted that P.lygodii is distinguished from all other species of Periconiella on ferns by
having long, obclavate-cylindrical, pluriseptate, smooth conidia. This is the first record of
P. lygodii on Lygodium japonicum in the Philippines, (Begum et al. 2009).
Ref. Coll.
Status of
Species Host Stromata Conidiophores Conidia Accession
collection
No.
pale
Medium to
olivaceous or
medium dark
olivaceous
brown, straight,
brown,
multiseptate,
obclavate-
Lygodium thick-walled, CALP
cylindrical,
japonicum branched apical 11680
Periconiella smooth,
(Japanese lacking portion, two to and FR
lygodii conico-
climbing four times BRIP
truncate at
fern) dichotomously or 52369
the base, apex
occasionally
obtuse or
trichotomously
subobtuse, 1-
branched, 90-350
5 septate, 25-
x 2-5.5 m
75 x 3-5.5 m
Reference: Chupp (1954); Ellis (1971); Braun (2004). * FR =First Record.
Table 6. Characteristics of Periconiella lygodii associated with leaf spot of Lygodium japonicum.
In Lucid Builder, data were incorporated for example for Cercospora adiantigena on
Adiantum phillipense (Fig. 2). The right side of the screen shows, all species that were
inputted while left side provides the inputted characters for specific species. The
information that were entered on the left side of the screen corresponds to the highlighted
Cercosporoid species on the right side.
34 Plant Pathology
Fig. 2. Screen shot from the Lucid Builder- Cercospora adiantigena on Adiantum phillipense.
Symptoms of the disease and measurement of morphological characters (Left inset).
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 35
During an identification session, Lucid Player allows one to choose any question in its list at
any time, but stepping through the key in a structured and sensible way will make one
task of identification easier. The guidelines for making identification are as follows (1)
familiarity with the specimen; (2) note and use of distinctive features; (3) answering easy
features first; 4) choosing multiple states; and (5) checking the result.
Familiarity with the characteristics of the specimen to be identified is essential. Briefly
reviewing Lucid key and specimens characteristics before one starts will facilitate the
identification. In any key, some taxa may possess particularly distinctive features. Use of
these may allow the taxon to be keyed out in a very few steps. At the very least, starting
with particularly distinctive or striking features for the first character states selected may
quickly reduce the list of entities remaining. One can select any features from any position in
the list and start by browsing the list of features available for obvious features that one can
quite quickly answer, as opposed to getting stuck on the first one. Lucid is designed to
overcome problems associated with difficult and obscure features.Always choose multiple
states if one is uncertain which state is the correct one to choose for a particular specimen.
One can choose as many states as from any one feature. After a preliminary identification
has been made, one can check the other information (notes or image) provided for the taxon.
Lucid Player allows one to input a list of character states that best describe the specimen to
be identified. These character states can be selected (or de-selected) in any order, resulting in
a shortening of the list of remaining taxa that best match the decribed specimen. The upper
left side of the screen shows all characters for a given specimen while its lower left side
indicates the characters that were chosen. The upper right side of the screen provides the
possible identity of the specimen while the lower right side shows the discarded taxa from
the list (Fig. 4).
In the present study, Lucid key was developed to identify Cercosporoid fungi, even though
the dichotomous keys are the most common keys encountered. The use of dichotomous keys
has a major disadvantage: if a couplet is difficult or impossible to answer, the identification
session often ends there. Lucid has the advantage over printed dichotomous keys in that the
user is able to skip an unanswerable couplet or question and still proceed with identification
because Lucid key allows to start at any point and proceed in any order. Lucid guide for
smut fungi of Australia has already been completed. Its accompanying CD, incorporating a
Lucid Player, provides an easy- to-use, interactive key to smut species, with comprehensive
fact-sheets, distribution maps, and over 1000 images (Vanky and Shivas, 2008). On the other
hand, Lucid guide for smut fungi of Thailand is still underway in collaboration with
Australian plant pathologists (Shivas, personal communication). Gerald (2005) reported
that, Diagnosing Postharvest Diseases of Cantaloupe is the first Lucid key developed in
the U.S. for a set of plant diseases and one of the first plant disease identification keys ever
developed in Lucid. A Lucid key was developed for the identification of Phytophthora species
in USA based on morphological and molecular characters (Ristaino et al. 2008). In the
Taxonomic Review of and Development
of a Lucid Key for Philippine Cercosporoids and Related Fungi 37
present study only the data of the true Cercosporoids like, Cercospora, Pseudocercospora and
Passalora were inputted into the Lucid key.
Identification of Cercosporoid fungi is a difficult task, and the Lucid key was created to help
provide individuals with easily accessible tools to distinguish species. Recent experience
suggests that computer-based identification keys will become an increasingly important part
of the move towards providing taxonomic information on-line.
7. References
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Begum, M.M., Shivas, R.G. and Cumagun, C.J.R. (2009). First record of Periconiella lygodii
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4: 17-18.
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Begum, M.M. and Cumagun, C.J.R. (2010). First record of Cercospora basellae-albae from the
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Crous, P.W., Kang, J.C., and Braun, U. (2001). A phylogenetic redefinition of anamorph
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2
General Description of
Rhizoctonia Species Complex
Genhua Yang and Chengyun Li
Key Laboratory of Agro-Biodiversity and Pest Management of Education
Ministry of China, Yunnan Agricultural University, Kunming, Yunnan
China
1. Introduction
The genus concept of Rhizoctonia spp. was established by de Candolle (1815) (Sneh et al.,
1998). However, the lack of specific characters led to the classification of a mixture of
unrelated fungi as Rhizoctonia spp. (Parmeter and Whitney, 1970; Moore, 1987). Ogoshi
(1975) enhanced the specificity of the genus concept for Rhizoctonia by elevating the
following characteristics of R. solani to the genus level. Based on this revised genus concept,
species of Rhizoctonia can be differentiated by mycelia color, number of nuclei per young
vegetative hyphal cell and the morphology of their teleomorph. The teleomorph of
Rhizoctonia spp. belongs to the sub-division Basidiomycota, class Hymenomycetes.
The anamorphs of Rhizoctonia are heterogeneous. Moore (1987) placed the anamorphs of
Thanatephorus spp. in Moniliopsis. She reserved the genus Rhizoctonia for anamorph of
ustomycetous fungi which have septa with simple pores. Moniliopsis species have smooth,
broad hyphae with brown walls, multinucleate cells, dolipore septa with perforate
parenthesomes and teleomorphs in the genera Thanatephorus and Waitea. Of the binucleate
Rhizoctonia spp., the anamorphs of the R. repens group (teleomorph Tulasnella) were assigned
to the new genus Epulorhiza. Anamorph of Ceratobasidium was assigned to the new genus
Ceratorhiza (Moore, 1987). Moores system is taxonomically correct and justified. At present,
the concept of genus Rhizoctonia has become clear from these taxonomical studies at the
molecular level (Gonzalez et al., 2001). However, many researchers (Sneh et al., 1998) in the
world still retain the name Rhizoctonia for Moores Moniliopsis spp., Ceratorhiza spp. and
Epulorhiza spp.. Hence, I used the name of Rhizoctonia in this study.
Affinity for hyphal fusion (anastomosis) (Parmeter et al., 1969; Parmeter and Whitney, 1970;
Ogoshi et al., 1983a; Burpee et al., 1980a) has been used to characterize isolates among R.
solani, R. zeae, R. oryzae, R. repens and binucleate Rhizoctonia spp. with Ceratobasidium
teleomorphs. To date, isolates of R. solani have been assigned to 13 anastomosis groups (AG)
and those of R. zeae and R. oryzae have each been assigned to their own one group (Sneh et
al., 1998; Carling et al., 1999, 2002c).
Anastomosis reactions between hyphae of paired isolates of R. solani consist of several types;
such as perfect fusion, imperfect fusion, contact fusion and no reaction (Matsumoto et al.,
1932). At present, four categories of anastomosis (C3 to C0) defined by Carling et al. (1996)
42 Plant Pathology
have been accepted by many researchers. These are useful for a better understanding of the
genetic diversity of R. solani populations, because of the background genetically supported
by vegetative or somatic compatibility (VC or SC) of confronted isolates (MacNish et al,
1997). Each of categories is as follows:
C3: walls fuse; membranes fuse, accompanied with protoplasm connection; anastomosis
point frequently is not obvious; diameter of anastomosis point is equal or nearly equal
hyphal diameter; anastomosing cells and adjacent cells may die, but generally do not. This
category occurs for the same anastomosis group, same vegetative compatibility population
(VCP) and the same isolate.
C2: wall connection is obvious, but membrane contact is uncertain; anastomosing and
adjacent cells always die. This category occurs in same AG, but not between different VCPs.
C1: wall contact between hyphae is apparent, but both wall penetration and membrane-
membrane contact do not occur; occasionally one or both anastomosing cells and adjacent
cells die. This category occurs between different AGs or in the same AG.
C0: no reaction. This category occurs between different AGs.
In general, hyphal fusion occurs at a high frequency (50%) within members of the same
AG, with the exception of non-self-anastomosing isolates (Hyakumachi and Ui, 1988). On
the other hand, hyphal fusion among members of different AGs occurs at either a low
frequency (30%) or no fusion occurs. Rhizoctonia isolates giving C3 to C1 reactions in
anastomosing test have been taken to be the same AG.
To date, isolates of multinucleate R. solani have been assigned to 13 anastomosis groups
(AG-1 to AG-13), some of which include several subgroups and isolates of R. zeae and R.
oryzae have been assigned to WAG-Z and WAG-O, respectively (Sneh et al., 1998; Carling et
al., 1999, 2002c). Isolates of binucleate Rhizoctonia spp. with Ceratobasidium teleomorphs have
been reported. A system developed in Japan (Ogoshi et al.,1979, 1983 a,b; Sneh et al., 1998;
Hyakumachi et al., 2005) includes 21 anastomosis groups designated AG-A to AG-U, in
which at present AG-J and AG-M still are in question as members of binucleate Rhizoctonia.
Another system developed in the USA (Burpee et al., 1980a) includes 7 anastomosis groups
designed as CAG-1 to CAG -7. CAG-1 corresponds to AG-D, CAG-2 to AG-A, CAG-3 and
CAG-6 to AG-E, CAG-4 to AG-F, CAG-5 to AG-R, and CAG-7 to AG-S (Sneh et al., 1998;
Ogoshi et al., 1983a). At present, the anastomosis system based on AG-A through AG-U
used in this review paper is widely accepted by many researchers.
Some homogenous groups of isolates of R. solani are well known as bridging isolates (AG-
BI) that anastomose with members of different AGs (Carling, 1998). In general, there is no
contradiction in the conventional anastomosis grouping system by taking anastomosis
frequency into consideration. However, two exceptional cases where anastomosis frequency
mismatched with morphological, physiological and pathogenic characteristics have been
reported from tobacco (Nicoletti et al., 1999) and soybean (Naito and Kanematsu, 1994).
These demonstrate the limitations of using hyphal anastomosis as the sole criteria for
characterization and identification of closely related fungi. In addition, it is not easy to
determine the subgroup of isolates within the same AG because no differences occur in their
anastomosis reaction. Thus, in order to determine AGs or subgroups in R. solani, genetic
analysis using molecular approaches that employ multiple genetic loci is needed.
General Description of Rhizoctonia Species Complex 43
Isolates of R. solani that exhibits DNA base sequence homology and affinities for hyphal
anastomosis may represent a diverging evolutionary unit (Kuninaga and Yokosawa, 1980).
This hypothesis is supported by analysis of restriction fragment length polymorphisms
(RFLPs) and the sequences with in ribosomal RNA genes (rDNA) among different
anastomosis groups of R. solani (Vilgalys and Gonzalez, 1990; Gonzalez, et al., 2001; Carling
et al., 2002b).
As mentioned above, many AGs and subgroups of R. solani and binucleate Rhizoctonia spp.
have been reported as causal of agents Rhizoctonia diseases on a wide range of host species.
However, little is known about the Rhizoctonia diseases and the anastomosis groups and
subgroups of their causal fungi on vegetables, ornamentals and food crops in the Asian
tropics especially the southern parts of China.
Host: soybean, adzuki bean, apple, barley, chickpea, common bean, lima bean, potato,
strawberry, sugar beet, table beet, tobacco, turfgrass, wheat, and white lupine.
6. AG-6: HG-I, GV (Mazzola, 1997; Meyer et al., 1998; Sneh et al., 1998; Carling et al., 1999;
Pope and Carter, 2001; Naito, 2004)
Symptom: root rot, crater rot, and symbiosis (orchids).
Host: apple, wheat, carrot, and carnation.
Note: all isolates from forests are nonpathogenic.
7. AG-7: (Naito, et al., 1993; Baird and Carling, 1995; Carling, 1997, 2000; Carling et al.,
1998)
Symptoms: damping-off, root rot, and black scurf.
Host: carnation, cotton, soybean, watermelon (Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Mansfeld),
Raphanus Linn., and potato.
8. AG-8: (Sneh et al., 1998; Naito, 2004).
Symptoms: bare patch.
Host: barley, cereals, green pepper, potato, and wheat.
9. AG-9: (Sneh et al., 1998; Naito, 2004).
Symptoms: black scurf.
Host: potato, crucifers, wheat, and barley.
10. AG-10: (Sneh et al., 1998.)
Symptoms: weak pathogenic.
Host: barley and wheat.
11. AG-11: (Kumar et al., 2002).
Symptoms: damping-off and hypocotyls rot.
Host: barley, lupine, soybean, and wheat.
Note: this group is considered as bridging isolates (anastomose with each members of AG-2-
1, AG-2 BI, AG-8) (Carling et al., 1996).
12. AG-12: (Kumar et al., 2002).
Symptoms: symbiosis (orchids).
Host: Dactylorhiza aristata (Orchidaceae).
13. AG-13: (Carling et al., 2002a).
Symptoms: none.
Host: cotton.
General Description of Rhizoctonia Species Complex 47
7. AG-G (Mazzola, 1997; Sneh et al., 1998; Leclerc et al., 1999; Martin, 2000; Botha et al.,
2003; Fenille et al., 2005).
Symptoms: damping-off, root rot, and browning.
Host: strawberry, sugar beet, bean, pea, tomato, melon, sunflower, peanut, yacoon, apple,
Rhododendron Linn., and Fragaria x ananassa.
Note: Non-pathogenic binucleate Rhizoctonia spp. provide effective protection to young bean
seedlings against root rot caused by R. solani AG-4 (Leclerc et al., 1999).
8. AG-H (Hayakawa et al., 1999).
Symptoms: symbiosis (orchids).
Host: Dactylorhiza aristata (Orchidaceae).
9. AG-I (Mazzola, 1997; Sneh et al., 1998; Ravanlou and Banihashemi, 2002)
Symptoms: root rot and symbiosis (orchids).
Host: strawberry, sugar beet, wheat, apple, orchids, and Fragaria x ananassa.
10. AG-J: (Sneh et al., 1998).
Symptoms: none.
Host: apple.
11. AG-K (Demirci, 1998; Li et al., 1998; Sneh et al., 1998; Ravanlou and Banihashemi, 2002).
Symptoms: none.
Host: sugar beet, radish, tomato, carrot, onion, wheat, maize, Allium cepa (source: DDJB),
Pyrus communis (pear) (source: DDJB), and Fragaria x ananassa.
12. AG-L: No special diseases have been reported (Sneh et al., 1991).
13. AG-N: No special diseases have been reported (Sneh et al., 1991).
14. AG-O: No special diseases have been reported (Mazzola, 1997; Sneh et al., 1998).
Host: apple.
15. AG-P: (Sneh et al., 1998; Yang et al., 2006).
Symptoms: black rot and wirestem.
Host: tea (Camellia Linn.), red birch.
16. AG-Q: (Sneh et al., 1998).
Symptoms: none.
Host: (Bentgrass).
17. AG-R: (Sneh et al., 1998;Yang et al., 2006).
Symptoms: wirestem
Host: bean, pea, radish, onion, leaf lettuce, tomato, lima bean, snap bean, soybean, cowpea,
peanuts, red birch, and azalea.
General Description of Rhizoctonia Species Complex 49
3. Summary
In this chapter, we described the classification of Rhizoctonia spp. complex. Mutinucleate
Rhizoctonia spp. included 13 anastomosis, of which AG 1-4 were strong pathogenic on many
plants and AG 6-10 were orchid mycorrhizae. Binucleate Rhizoctonia spp. included 18
anastomosis groups, but AG-U belonged to AG-P and AG-T belonged to AG-A (Sharon et al.,
2008), which were weak or nonpathogenic to plants and some AGs were orchid mycorrhizae.
4. Acknowledgments
This work was supported by the National Basic Research Program (No. 2011CB100400) from
The Ministry of Science and Technology of China and the National Natural Science Funds,
China (30660006, and 31160352), respectively.
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3
1. Introduction
Microbes, and their distant relatives, plants, are thought to have co-evolved during the last 2
billion years. Most of the plant-associated prokaryotes are commensals, found primarily on
leaf surfaces or roots, and have no discernible or known effects on plant growth or
physiology; others evolved more or less intimate relationships with plants such as N-fixing
symbioses, endophytic existence or plant growth-promoting (rhizobacterial) associations;
yet others, the minority, wage outright hostility with plants, inciting various diseases.
Although some phytopathogenic bacteria internalize themselves in the plant vascular system,
most of them colonize plant tissues extracellularly and target plant cell wall and membrane or
internal cellular structures, signaling systems and metabolic machinery from the outside. For
targeting they deploy phytotoxic metabolites, hormones, polysaccharides, enzymes for the
hydrolysis of cell walls and other catalytic macromolecular effectors (and, exceptionally, DNA)
as ballistic missiles. To accomplish efficient transport of macromolecules across the bacterial
and/or the plant cell envelop (plant cell wall and membrane), Gram-negative bacteria possess
a suite of specialized transport systems, dedicated to the transport of selected sets of proteins
from the bacterial cytoplasm to the external environment or into other living cells. Type I to
type VI secretion systems (abbreviated T1SS to T6SS) form channels by assembling oligomeric
macromolecular complexes of varying composition and sophistication. These assemblies
function as molecular machines, are broadly conserved across Gram-negative bacteria and
54 Plant Pathology
play important roles in the virulence of pathogens. In general, most of these systems require a
component providing energy to the secretion process (usually an ATPase), an outer-membrane
protein, and various components involved either in scaffolding the macromolecular complex
into the cell envelope or in the specific recognition of secreted substrates. It is noteworthy that
certain components of these secretion machines are thought to be derived from other
membrane-bound multiprotein structures serving a different purpose (see below).
2. Historical highlights
The T6SS is a relatively recent discovery, first identified as a protein secretion apparatus
involved in virulence of Vibrio cholerae in the Dictyostelium (Mougous et al., 2006) and
Pseudomonas aeruginosa in mouse models (Pukatzki et al., 2006). In several cases it has been
shown to be important for bacterial virulence (host-pathogen interaction) and has attracted
strong interest because it has been found via in silico analysis in the genomes of a large
number of Gram-negative bacteria associated with human and animal diseases. While
initially considered an atypical type IV secretion system (T4SS), various lines of evidence
have established its identity as a distinct protein transport system (Bladergroen et al., 2003;
Roest et al., 1997; Pukatski et al. 2006, Boyer et al., 2009).
An interesting twist to the T6SS story is the discovery of multiple copies of gene clusters
coding for T6SS homologs in a large number of sequenced eubacterial genomes, including
those of several plant-associated species (KEGG gene database; http://www.genome.jp/
kegg-bin/get_htext?ko02044.keg). These species are mostly within the class of
Proteobacteria, but also within the Planctomycetes and Acidobacteria (Tseng et al., 2009;
Boyer et al., 2009). Several T6SS gene clusters are within pathogenicity islands, for
example, P. aeruginosa-HSI (Hcp-secretion island), enteroaggregative Escherichia coli
(EAEC-pheU), Salmonella typhimurium-SCI (Salmonella Centrisome Island), Francisella
tularensis-FPI (Francisella Pathogenicity Island), Agrobacterium tumefaciens (Wu et al., 2008),
Pectobacterium atrosepticum (Liu et al., 2008) and Xanthomonas oryzae (Tseng et al., 2009),
which indicates relationship to virulence or survival in the host. Bioinformatic analysis
revealed that most of the avirulent bacterial species studied (i.e. bacteria that have no
known host) lack T6SS orthologs but active protein secretion or the ability to invade hosts
await experimental testing (Shrivastava & Mande 2008; Bingle et al., 2008). Many
interesting highlights are best expressed by the imaginative titles of many publications
cited in this chapter.
studies in a few bacteria further suggest that each T6SSs assumes a different role in the
interactions of the harbouring organism with others. However, it is not known if there are
T6SSs that can target both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Unlike the Type III secretion systems
(T3SSs), only few T6SS substrates have been identified and experimentally verified to date,
but others may merely await identification.
It is now becoming increasingly clear that T6SS probably represents an evolutionary
adaptation of a transmembrane protein translocation mechanism and at least some of its
core components may share a common ancestor with bacteriophages. Common
evolutionary ancestry and similar design are features ostensibly shared between other
macromolecular transport systems and other bacterial devices that have evolved to serve
entirely different biological functions (e.g. between T2SS and type IV pili, T3SS and flagella,
or T4SS and conjugative pili). Indeed, the study of the macromolecular assembly process in
these systems cross-feeds our understanding about structure, function and molecular
mechanisms of these bacterial nanomachines.
The T6SS appears to be an injectisome, with some of its core component proteins
structurally related to the cell-puncturing devices of tailed bacteriophages, and at least in
some well-studied cases, have been shown capable of translocating effector proteins into the
host cell cytoplasm (Bingle et al., 2008; Cascales, 2008; Filloux et al., 2008, 2011a; 2011b;
Shrivastava & Mande 2008; Russell et al., 2011; Zheng et al., 2011), as is the case with the
T3SS and T4SS. In the human pathogenic species V. cholerae and P. aeruginosa T6SS exports
haemolysin-coregulated proteins (Hcp) and Valine-glycine repeat (Vgr) proteins; for these
proteins the role of effectors associated with cytotoxicity in some in vitro models has been
proposed (Pukatzki et al., 2006; Mougous et al., 2006). However, VgrG and Hcp display
mutual dependence for secretion in V. cholerae, Edwardsiella tarda and enteroaggregative E.
coli (Pukatzki et al., 2007; Zheng & Leung, 2007; Dudley et al., 2006), suggesting that these
proteins might be not only passengers but also components of the secretion machine, a fact
also supported by recent structural studies (see section 3.3). Such dual function could be
related to distinct protein domains. In particular, the N-terminal domains of Vgr proteins
show strong homology with the T4 bacteriophage base plate components gp27 and gp5
(Pukatzki et al., 2007) and a conserved core followed by a highly polymorphic C-terminal
domain. The V. cholerae VgrG1 protein has a C-terminal domain homologous to the actin
cross-linking domain (ACD) of the RtxA toxin, while VgrG1 from Aeromonas hydrophila
possesses actin ADP-ribosylating activity (Pukatzki et al., 2007; Sheahan et al., 2004; Suarez
et al., 2010). Some VgrGs (evolved VgrGs) from various bacterial species possess
various effector-like C-terminal domains: a) a tropomyosin-like domain, which is thought
to manipulate actin filaments during Yersinia infections, b) a pertactin-like, YadA-like,
mannose-binding-like, or fibronectin-like domains or share similarities with
peptidoglycan- or fibronectin-binding sequences and c) homologs of the eukaryotic
lysosomal cathepsin D protein (Cascales, 2008). On the other hand, it was suggested that
some VgrG orthologs may not be injected but may remain attached to the bacterial cell
surface (Pukatzki et al., 2007).
Similarly to T3S systems, Hcp-secreted proteins lack N-terminal hydrophobic signal
sequences, indicating secretion in a Sec- or Tat-independent manner, and a probable
crossing of the bacterial cell envelope in a single step (Bingle et al., 2008; Pallen et al., 2003).
Furthermore, Hcp-secreted proteins seem to have intracellular targets in eukaryotic hosts.
56 Plant Pathology
Thus, the Hcp protein of A. hydrophila was found in culture supernatants, as well as in the
cytosol and the membrane of human epithelial cells after infection. Hcp secretion was
independent of the T3SS and the flagellar system and the secreted protein was capable of
binding to the murine macrophages from the outside, in addition to being translocated into
mammalian model host cells; heterologous expression of this protein in HeLa cells increased
the rate of apoptosis mediated by caspase 3 activation (Suarez et al., 2008). These findings
are consistent with Hcp being secreted/translocated by T6SS, along with other yet
unidentified effectors. The Hcp1 protein from pathogenic P. aeruginosa was also shown to be
actively secreted in cystic fibrosis patients resulting in Hcp specific antibody production.
Likewise, a novel T6SS protein, VasX, which is required for pathogenicity against the
amoeboid host model Dictyostelium discoideum has recently been described. VasX is unique
because it contains a putative pleckstrin homology domain which is typically only found in
eukaryotic and not in bacterial proteins. VasX can bind to mammalian membrane lipids, an
interaction mediated by the putative pleckstrin homology domain. It has been proposed that
this domain may direct VasX to specific targets within the host cell resulting in disruption of
host cell signaling (Miyata et al., 2011).
Another hallmark of T6SSs clusters is a gene coding for an AAA+ Clp-like ATPase , named
17 ClpV, belonging to a sub class of ClpB ATPases which comprise hexameric enzymes
involved in protein quality control. A possible role of T6SS Clp-ATPase members might be
the unfolding of substrates to be secreted, as demonstrated for the T4SS and the T3SS
ATPases (Cascales, 2008). However, the Salmonella enterica T6SS Clp protein forms
oligomeric complexes with ATP hydrolytic activity but fails to unfold aggregated proteins
(Schlieker et al., 2005). A study by Bonemann et al. (2009) revealed the involvement of the
ClpV protein of V. cholerae in remodelling supramolecular assemblies formed by two core
components VipA/VipB (synonyms: ImpB/ImpC) which are crucial for T6SS secretion and
virulence (see section 3.3). However, some bacterial species (e.g. Rhizobium leguminosarum
and Francisella tularensis) may not contain functional Clp homologs within their T6SS
clusters (Filloux et al., 2008).
Another T6SS-linked gene, icmF (intracellular multiplication in macrophages), has been
previously studied in the context of T4SS secretion and shown to be necessary for efficient
secretion. This protein carries three transmembrane domains (Sexton et al., 2004) and is
partially required for Legionella pneumophila replication in macrophages (Purcell &
Shuman 1998). Furthermore, the lack of IcmF resulted in a reduced level of another core
protein, DotU, suggesting that the two proteins interact or are co-regulated. It was also
shown that the lack of DotU and/or IcmF affected the stability of other core components,
which suggests that DotU and IcmF assist in assembly and stability of a functional T6SS
(Filloux et al., 2008). Furthermore, IcmF has been proposed to function as a further
energizing component (Bonemann et al., 2009). Amino acid sequence analysis predicts
that IcmF is located in the inner membrane and consists of a cytosolic and a periplasmic
domain. The cytosolic domain has a conserved Walker-A motif, indicating a function as
an ATPase during secretion, consistent with the finding that IcmF mutations prevent Hcp
secretion (Pukatzki et al., 2006; Zheng & Leung 2007). An icmF mutant of avian
pathogenic E. coli had decreased adherence to and invasion of epithelial cells, as well as
decreased intra-macrophage survival and was also defective for biofilm formation on
abiotic surfaces (Pace et al., 2011).
Phytobacterial Type VI Secretion System
Gene Distribution, Phylogeny, Structure and Biological Functions 57
3.2 Regulation
Although T6SS gene expression inside macrophages has been demonstrated for several
animal and human pathogens (e. g. Burkholderia pseudomallei, S. enterica, V. cholerae and
Francisella (Shalom et al., 2007; Parsons & Heffron 2005; de Bruin et al., 2007), and to a small
extent in plant pathogens, the signals triggering T6SS expression are largely unknown. For
example, in V. cholerae, upon phagocytosis, expression of the T6SS induces cytoskeleton
rearrangements through the secretion of the actin cross-linking domain of VgrG (Ma et al.,
2009). Likewise, the Hcp1 of P. aeruginosa is induced during the infection of cystic fibrosis
patients (Mougous et al., 2006), while Hcp3 is expressed upon addition of epithelial cell
extracts (Chugani & Greenberg, 2007). No information concerning the expression of Hcp2 is
available.
The T6SS regulation involves various transcriptional activators such as AraC, TetR-, and
MarR-like proteins, 54-like factors and heat-stable nucleoid-structural (H-NS) proteins
(Bernard et al., 2010). Likewise, two-component systems, like the ferric uptake regulator Fur
and the Quorum sensing (QS) related regulators like LuxI, LuxR and acyl homoserine
lactones (AHL) are reported to be involved in regulation of T6SS expression (Bernard et al.,
2010). It has been also reported (Mougous et al., 2007) that the regulation of the HSI-1 in P.
aeruginosa PAO1 is influenced by the sensor kinases RedS and the LadS, resulting in
opposite patterns of regulation for the type III and type VI secretion systems in this
bacterium, as in S. enterica (Parsons & Heffron 2005). T6SS gene expression in P. syringae pv.
syringae B278a is also regulated by the two sensor kinases RetS (negatively) and LadS
(positively). Two more proteins, PpkA and PppA, seem to play an important role in T6SS
gene regulation (Mougous et al., 2007). PpkA is a kinase, which becomes activated by auto-
phosphorylation under certain environmental conditions whereas PppA is a phosphatase,
which counteracts with the action of PpkA. Both proteins act on a common protein
substrate, Fha1 (fork head-associated domain protein; Mougous et al., 2007). Gene
expression in HSI-2 and HSI-3 is proposed to be regulated by two 54 factors which are
encoded in the respective T6SS clusters of P. aeruginosa, as well as in their V. cholerae and A.
hydrophila homologs.
Recent work reported the identification of Fur as the main regulator of the
enteroaggregative E. coli sci1 T6SS gene cluster. A detailed analysis of the promoter region
showed the presence of conserved motifs, which are target of the DNA adenine methylase
Dam (Brunet et al., 2011). The authors showed that the sci1 gene cluster expression is under
the control of an epigenetic methylation-dependent switch: Fur binding prevents
methylation of a conserved motif, whereas methylation at this specific site decreases the
affinity of Fur for its binding box. In other work (Bernard et al., 2011), several clusters were
identified (including those of V. cholerae, A. hydrophila, P. atrosepticum, P. aeruginosa,
Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato, and a Marinomonas sp.) as having typical 24/12
sequences, enhancer binding motifs recognized by the alternate sigma factor 54 which
directs the RNA polymerase to cognate promoters and requires the action of a bacterial
enhancer binding protein (bEBP), which binds to cis-acting upstream activating sequences.
The authors further showed that putative bEBPs are encoded within the T6SS gene clusters
possessing 54 boxes and, through in vitro binding and in vivo reporter fusion assays, they
demonstrated that the expression of these clusters is dependent on both 54 and bEBPs
(Bernard et al., 2011).
58 Plant Pathology
A study by Zheng et al. (2011) provides new insights into the functional requirements of
secretion as well as killing of bacterial and eukaryotic phagocytic cells by V. cholerae by
analyzing non-polar mutations (in-frame deletions) in each gene predicted to code for V.
cholera T6SS components. They grouped 17 proteins into four categories: twelve proteins
(VipA, VipB, VCA0109VCA0115, ClpV, VCA0119, and VasK) are essential for Hcp
secretion and bacterial virulence, and thus likely function as structural components of the
apparatus; two proteins (VasH and VCA0122) were thought to be regulators that are
required for T6SS gene expression and virulence; another two (VCA0121 and VgrG-3) were
not essential for Hcp expression, secretion or bacterial virulence, and their functions are
unknown; one protein (VCA0118) was not required for Hcp expression or secretion but still
played a role in both amoebae and bacterial killing and may therefore be an effector protein.
ClpV was required for Dictyostelium virulence but was less important for killing E. coli. In
addition, VgrG-2 which is encoded outside of the T6SS cluster was required for bacterial
killing but VgrG-1 was not and several genes in the same putative operon as vgrG-1 and
vgrG-2 also contributed to Dictyostelium virulence but had a smaller effect on E. coli killing.
The crystal structure of the E. tarda EvpC protein, an Hcp1 homolog from the virulent
protein gene cluster EVP which contains a conserved T6SS, has been recently determined at
2.8 resolution (PDB accession code 3EAA) and revealed a high structural similarity with
Hcp1 (Jobichen et al., 2010). In solution, EvpC exists as a dimer at low concentrations and as
a hexamer at high concentrations. In the crystals symmetry-related EvpC molecules form
hexameric rings which stack to form tubes similar to Hcp1. Structure-based mutagenesis has
revealed a critical role for EvpC secretion for three negatively charged N-terminal residues,
and three positively charged C-terminal ones (Jobichen et al., 2010). This secretion
impairment of EvpC decreases the virulence of the T6SS-containing pathogenic bacteria.
The structure of the N-terminal fragment (residues 1-483 out of 824) of the VgrG protein
encoded by the E. coli CFT073 gene c3393 was determined at a resolution of 2.6 (PDB ID
2P5Z). The protein shows striking structural similarities (Leiman et al., 2009) to the structure
of the complex (gp5)3-(gp27)3 of the T4 bacteriophage cell-puncturing device (PDB ID 1K28).
VgrG can be described as a fusion of T4 gp27 and gp5; at the level of equivalent domains
VgrG shares the highest structural homology with gp27 and exhibits only minor
modifications relative to gp5. The VgrG structure comprises a domain (residues 380-470) of
unknown function which is conserved in all VgrGs. This domain (DUF586) is the equivalent
of the oligosaccharide/oligonucleotide-binding (OB)-fold domain of T4 gp5. The secondary
structure prediction of the C-terminal part of VgrG (residues 490-820) which follows the OB-
fold domain, shows repetitive -strands (5-10 residues each) flanked by glycines. It is likely,
that these strands form a -helix that is equivalent to the triple stranded -helix in trimeric
gp5 which is involved in membrane penetration. The trimeric structure of the N-terminal
VgrG fragment in the crystal, probably indicates that the complete VgrG protein may also
adopt a trimeric structure that is equivalent to the (gp5)3-(gp27)3 complex. Sequence
analyses suggest that effector domains are fused to the C-termini of many VgrG proteins
(evolved VgrGs). The gp5 C-terminal -helix has a 23 KDa extension of unknown function
corresponding to a VgrG effector domain. Since many VgrG proteins do not contain an
additional C-terminal domain, it may be concluded that different T6SS injectisomes service
separate sets of effector proteins.
The structural similarities of Hcp and VgrG to components of the injection apparatus of
tailed bacteriophages are highly suggestive that the two proteins might be structural
components of T6SS, rather than effector proteins. The absence of evolved VgrGs in many
T6SSs suggests also that Hcp/VgrG might act as a conduit for T6SS effectors. The inner
diameter of the Hcp tubule (40 ) would allow the passage of proteins in an unfolded form;
delivery of effectors to target cells might involve the cell-puncturing activity of VgrG.
The energy for the translocation of secreted proteins to the extracellular environment is
provided by two components of the T6SS that have been introduced in section 3.1: IcmF and
ClpV (Bonemann et al., 2009). IcmF is a membrane-embedded component that forms a
structure spanning the inner and outer membranes. ClpV does not interact with the
exoproteins Hcp and VgrG, but binds specifically with its N-domain to two cytosolic
proteins, VipA (COG3516) and VipB (COG3517), that are conserved and essential
components of T6SS (Bonemann et al., 2009, 2010). VipA and VipB interact with each other
forming a tubular, cogweel-like structure larger than 200 kDa, with a diameter of
approximately 300 and a central channel of 100 in diameter, and a length ranging from
25 to 500nm. Electron microscopy studies of VipA/VipB suggest that there is an overall
60 Plant Pathology
resemblance between the VirA/VirB tubules and the T4 tail sheath structure which
accommodates the viral tail tube proteins (Aksyuk et al., 2009); the diameter of the inner
channel of VirA/VirB tubules is sufficient to encase Hcp tubes. In-frame deletion mutants of
vipA and vipB genes could no longer secrete Hcp and VgrG proteins, although the total
levels of the proteins were not affected (Bonemann et al., 2009), thus suggesting a crucial
role of VirA and VirB for T6SS function. Importantly, there is no evidence for an interaction
of VipA and VipB with the cytosolic proteins Hcp and VgrG. VipA/VipB cogwheel-like
tubules are disassembled by ClpV; this ClpV-mediated remodelling of VipA/VipB tubules
into smaller complexes (100kDa), has been suggested as an essential step in T6SS secretion,
revealing an unexpected role for this ATPase component in a bacterial protein secretion
system. The recent characterization of the P. syringae pv. syringae T6SS proteins ImpB (177aa)
and ImpC (500aa) (homologs of VipA and VipB respectively) suggest that the two proteins
form supramolecular structures of comparable size to the assemblies of VipA/VipB (M.
Kokkinidis, unpublished results). These ongoing studies represent the first structural
analysis of the T6SS of a plant pathogen.
Fig. 1. Part 1
62 Plant Pathology
Fig. 1. Part 2
Fig. 1. Maps of T6SS clusters of plant-associated bacteria. Orthologs are indicated by the
same color. The genes adjacent to or encoded by the T6SS gene clusters but not recognized
as orthologs are indicated by light beige arrows. Arrows indicate the transcriptional
direction. The gene locus numbers are referred in the text and the published or annotated
gene designations are indicated above the genes of each cluster.
Phytobacterial Type VI Secretion System
Gene Distribution, Phylogeny, Structure and Biological Functions 63
like amoebae and mammalian immune cells. Chow & Mazmanian (2010) further propose that
pathobionts of the human gastrointestinal tract, such as H. hepaticus, may have evolved a T6SS
as a mechanism to actively maintain a non-pathogenic, symbiotic relationship in the GI tract
by regulating bacterial colonization and host inflammation; they hypothesize that alteration in
the composition of the microbiota, known as dysbiosis, may be a critical factor in various
human inflammatory disorders such as inflammatory bowel disease and colon cancer.
Knowledge on the functionalities and biological roles of T6SS in plant-associated bacteria is
poor and limited to relatively few systems (reviewed in Records, 2011). With regard to
phytopathogens, functionality has been demonstrated for A. tumefaciens, P. atrosepticum, and
two pathovars of Pseudomonas syringae. A study with P. s. pv. tomato DC3000 (Wang et al.,
2008) has shed some light on the possible role of the T6SSs in pathogenicity. Deletions of the
entire T6SS clusters (T6SS-II or T6SS-III; grouping is based on our phylogenetic analysis, see
sections 5, and 6) or both copies of icmF (icmF1 and icmF2) caused reduction of bacterial
population in Nicotiana benthamiana and milder symptoms on tomato leaves. When either
the T6SS-II or T6SS-III cluster was deleted, both symptoms severity and bacterial
populations were reduced. However, vgrG1 or vgrG2 deletions had no effect on disease
development on tomato or on N. benthamiana. However, an insertional mutant of the clpV/B
gene of the T6SS maintained the ability for in planta multiplication and produced disease
symptoms similar to those caused by wild-type strain (Records & Gross 2010). RNA
transcripts of the icmF homologs of the P. syringae pv. tomato DC3001 and P. syringae pv.
phaseolicola 1448a were detected by RT-PCR in both rich and minimal media, indicating that
the gene is probably expressed in both strains (Sarris et al., 2010). Microarray analysis
showed that the A. tumefaciens T6SS is induced by mildly acidic conditions, such as
encountered in plant tissues and in the rhizosphere (Yuan et al., 2008) and deletion of hcp
resulted in reduced tumorigenesis on potato tuber slices (Wu et al., 2008). The P.
atrosepticum T6SS is induced by potato tuber extracts (Mattinen et al., 2007). Transcriptome
profiling (Liu et al., 2008) also indicated regulation of the T6SS of P. atrosepticum by quorum
sensing, as deletion of expI, a gene responsible for N-(3-oxohexanoyl)-L-homoserine lactone
synthesis. Furthermore, deletions in either ECA3438 (impJ) or ECA3444 (vipB) resulted in
slightly reduced virulence in potato stems and tubers. However, mutation of the ECA3432
(icmF) gene resulted in increased potato tuber maceration, indicating that the T6SS may be
involved in antipathogenesis activity (Yuan et al., 2008). Whether T6SS mechanisms engage
other aspects of P. syringae-host/vector biology, antagonism and predation in the plant or
other micro-environments remain open questions. Among the symbiotic N-fixing bacteria,
extended symbiosis phenotypes of certain rhizobia have been linked to a T6SS. The presence
of T6SS homologs in the sequenced genomes of many rhizobia presents opportunities to
further investigate its role in bacteria-plant symbiosis (Fauvart & Michiels, 2008).
III, here referred to interchangeably as T6SS-I, T6SS-II and T6SS-III, respectively) (Sarris et
al., 2010), as well as their homologs from other known T6SS clusters (Boyer et al., 2009).
Clusters containing at least five genes encoding proteins with similarity to known T6SS core
proteins were considered as part of a putative T6SS locus. The genomic regions thus
identified were then extended by examining four kilo-bases up- and down-stream for
putative conserved genes associated with T6SS by orthologue and paralogue finder
analysis against all the KEGG deposited genomes. Maps of the genomic islands were
constructed manually in PowerPoint Microsoft office software. For sequence alignment and
phylogenetic tree construction, the conserved proteins ImpL, ImpG, IpmC and ImpH from
all phytobacterial species deposited at the NCBI and KEGG databases were edited with the
DNAman computer package (Lynnon Co) and were included for sequence alignment and
tree construction. Phylogenetic relations were inferred using the neighbour-joining
method (Saitou & Nei 1987) offered in MEGA4 software (Tamura et al., 2007). In Table 1
and Fig. 1 the clusters are identified by the organsims initials, and in the phylogenetic
trees the organisms name/strain number and the T6SS groupings used in the text and
figure legends are given.
Table 1. Gene content of the putative T6SS genes of phytobacterial species, indicating locus
names and COG numbers (not available for OmpA). (+): present, (++): present in a second
copy, (-): missing. *Species abbreviations: AAsC: Acidovorax avenae subsp. citrulli; AT:
Agrobacterium tumefaciens; AV: Agrobacterium vitis; BJ: Bradyrhizobium japonicum; PA:
Pectobacterium atrocepticum; EA: Erwinia amylovora; EP: Erwinia pyrifoliae; ML: Mesorhizobium
loti; PS: Pseudomonas syringae; RS: Ralstonia solanacearum; RE: Rhizobium etli; RL: Rhizobium
leguminosarum; Xsp: Xanthomonas spp.; CT: Cupriavidus taiwanensis; DZ: Dickeya zeae; DD:
Dickeya dadantii; PA: Pantoea ananatis. **The numbers in the second row of the table denote the
percentage of cases where the gene/protein is present among the species/strains examined.
***Latin numerals I, II, III denote T6SS-I, T6SS-II and T6SS-III, respectively. A table of the locus
numbers from the KEGG database is available upon request from P.F. Sarris.
66 Plant Pathology
54 Bradyrhizobium japonicum
24 Xanthomonas spp (T6SS I)
Mesorhizobium loti
4 30 Rhizobium etli
Xanthomonas spp (T6SS II)
25 26 Agrobacterium vitis
92 Rhizobium leguminosarum
38 41 Agrobacterium tumefaciens
Pantoea ananatis (T6SS II)
24 Acidovorax avenae subsp citrulli
35 Erwinia amylovora (T6SS II)
43 Erwinia pyrifoliae (T6SS II)
Cupriavidus taiwanensis (T6SS I)
Cupriavidus taiwanensis (T6SS II)
44 Ralstonia solanacearum
65 Xanthomonas spp (T6SS III)
Pseudomonas syringae (T6SS I)
45 Pseudomonas syringae (T6SS II)
39 Pseudomonas syringae (T6SS III)
90 Erwinia amylovora (T6SS III)
49 Pantoea ananatis (T6SS III)
79 Pectobacterium atrocepticum (T6SS I)
53 Dickeya zeae
64 Dickeya dadantii
0.05
Fig. 2. Distance tree of T6SS of various plant pathogenic bacteria; constructed with data of
Table 1, through a matrix where each gene locus was scored as (+) when present or as (-)
when not present. The evolutionary history was inferred using the Neighbor-Joining
method (Saitou & Nei, 1987). The bootstrap consensus tree inferred from 5000 replicates
(Felsenstein, 1985) is taken to represent the evolutionary history of the species analysed
(Felsenstein 1985). Branches corresponding to partitions reproduced in less than 50%
bootstrap replicates are collapsed. The percentage of replicate trees in which the associated
taxa clustered together in the bootstrap test (5000 replicates) is shown next to the branches
(Felsenstein, 1985). The tree is drawn to scale, with branch lengths in the same units as those
of the evolutionary distances used to infer the phylogenetic tree. The evolutionary distances
were computed using the Poisson correction method (Zuckerkandl & Pauling 1965) and are
in the units of the number of amino acid substitutions per site. All positions containing gaps
and missing data were eliminated from the dataset (Complete deletion option). There were a
total of 29 positions in the final dataset. Phylogenetic analyses were conducted with MEGA4
(Tamura et al., 2007).
0.1
Fig. 3. Phylogenetic clustering of the plant-associated bacterial species based on the
sequence of four T6SS core proteins (ImpC ImpG, ImpH and ImpL). The evolutionary
history was inferred using the Neighbor-Joining method (Saitou & Nei 1987). The bootstrap
consensus tree inferred from 5000 replicates (Felsenstein, 1985) is taken to represent the
evolutionary history of the proteins analysed replicates (Felsenstein 1985). For other details
see Fig. 2 legend. There were a total of 1729 positions in the final dataset. Phylogenetic
analyses were conducted with MEGA4 (Tamura et al., 2007). Difference in tree branch colors
indicates the different bacterial species.
The consensus phylogenetic tree obtained shows four deep branches. One branch hosts the
majority of the phytobacterial T6SSs, except for those of P. syringae pathovars (T6SSs-I, II
and III), the Dickeya spp. T6SS and P. carotovorum T6SS. In this branch several T6SS groups
are evident. One group includes the Xanthomonas spp. T6SS-I and T6SS-II together with the
T6SS of Rhizobium etli T6SS-II. A second group includes the C. taiwanensis T6SS-I, A. avenae
subsp. citrulli, P. ananatis T6SS-II and the Erwinia spp. T6SS-II. The B. japonicum T6SS
68 Plant Pathology
appears distinct (with bootstrap value 83) but very close to a subgroup formed by the M. loti
and R. etli T6SS-II. Another group in this phylogenetic branch includes the R. leguminosarum
and Agrobacterium spp. T6SSs. Finally, in the same branch are the Xanthomonas spp. T6SS-III,
grouped together with the R. solanacearum and C. taiwanensis T6SS-II. In the second
phylogenetic branch are grouped only the P. syringae pathovars. As previously reported
(Sarris et al., 2010), in this group there are two distinct sub-groups. The first one includes the
P. syringae T6SS-II and T6SS-III, while the second carries only the P. syringae T6SS-I. Finally,
two more branches were formed but without bootstrap value. The first one includes the
T6SSs of Dickeya spp. and P. atrosepticum, while the second consists of the P. ananatis T6SS-II
and Erwinia spp. T6SS-III.The phylogenetic relationships of the P. syringae T6SSs were
further examined by constructing an additional phylogenetic tree of the four core proteins
(ImpC, ImpG, IpmH and ImpL-like) by including representatives of fully sequenced non-
phytopathogenic fluorescent Pseudomonas and the R. solanacearum T6SS, C. taiwanensis T6SS-
II, P. ananatis T6SS-II and Erwinia spp. T6SS-III, as these appear as reference species based on
their distant relationships in the tree of Fig. 3. The Pseudomonas tree shows three deep
branches (not including out-group species), each including species with high boostrap
values (Fig. 4). The first branch includes a group which is formed by the P. syringae T6SS-II
0.1
Fig. 4. T6SS evolutionary relationships of 30 fluorescent Pseudomonas T6SSs. The
evolutionary history was inferred using four (4) T6SS core proteins (ImpC, ImpG, ImpH,
ImpL), by the Neighbor-Joining method (Saitou & Nei, 1987). The optimal tree with the sum
of branch length = 6.49662029 is shown. For other details see Fig. 2 and Fig. 3 legends).
Difference in tree branch colors indicates the different Pseudomonas species, while the out-
group species are presented with black.
Phytobacterial Type VI Secretion System
Gene Distribution, Phylogeny, Structure and Biological Functions 69
and T6SS-III, the P. aeruginosa HSI-II, P. fluorescens T6SS-II and the P. entomophila four T6SS
core proteins. In this group, the P. syringae T6SS-III is phylogenetically very close to the P.
aeruginosa HSI-II and P. fluorescens T6SS-II. The P. syringe T6SS-III is present only in P.
syringae pv. tomato strain DC3000, and has the same gene order and high protein homology
with the T6SS-II of the P. aeruginosa PA14 HS-II (data not shown), which reinforces the view
of Yan and colleagues (Yan et al., 2008) that the model plant pathogen P. s. pv. tomato
DC3000 is a very atypical tomato strain. Thus, it appears that the P. syringae T6SS-III may
have been horizontally acquired and maintained through vertical transfer and is remarkably
well conserved in P. s. pv. tomato DC3000, P. aeruginosa and P. fluorescens species with
distant genetic relatedness and very distinct, opportunistic relationships with plants. A
second distinct group in the same branch is formed by the T6SSs I and III of P. putida. The
second branch in the four-protein tree is formed by the P. fluorescens T6SS-I and the P.
aeruginosa HSI-I and III. Finally, the third branch of the four protein tree includes the P.
syringae T6SS-I grouped with the P. putida T6SS-II. Remarkably, in the two P. fluorescens
strains analysed the sole T6SS in Pf-5 and the T6SS-I and T6SS-II in Pf0-1 are quite distant.
Two of the three T6SSs found in the P. putida strains studied (T6SS-I in Pf-5 and PKT2440,
and T6SS-III in the later strain) are very close relatives while the third one (T6SS-II) is very
distant from the others (Fig. 4).
campesrtis pv. vesicatoria XCV2120 (X.c.v.), one in X. axonopodis 4122 (X.a.c.) and three in
each, X.o and X.o.o. One T6SS cluster in XCV2120 extends from XCV2120 (impB-like) to
XCV2143 (impA-like) and is referred to here as T6SS-I, while a second cluster is located
from XCV4202 (impA-like) to XCV4243 (impB-like) and referred as T6SS-II (Fig. 1). This
cluster contains two interruptions by some apparently T6SS-unrelated putative ORFs, one,
between XCV4214 (impI-like) and XCV4236 (clpB-like), and another between XCV4202
(impA-like) and XCV4208 (impM-like). Two T6SS clusters are found in X.c.v.: one of them
is phylogenetically closer to the T6SS-I found in X.o. and X.o.o while the second seems to
more closely related to the sole T6SS locus of X.a.c (referred to as T6SS-II in Fig. 3) which
spans from XAC4112 (impA-like) to XAC4147 (impB-like) (Fig. 1). The X.a.c. T6SS locus is
almost collinear for the T6SS related genes and for the two T6SS-unrelated putative ORF
insertions with the T6SS of X.c.v. Whole genome comparisons (Potnis et al., 2011) recently
enabled an extensive analysis of the presence and distribution of T6SS among
Xanthomonas strains representing 15 pathovars. X.o. and X.o.o. carry the T6SS-I, located
from XOO3034 (impA-like) to XOO3052 (impB-like) and Xoryp_12330 (impA-like) to
Xoryp_12445 (impB-like), and a second T6SS which is referred to as T6SS-III in Fig. 1 and
is located between XOO3517 (impL-like) and XOO3474 (vgrG-like) in X.o. and
Xoryp_06365 (impL-like) and Xoryp_06645 (vgrG-like) in X.o.o. This locus contains a large
number of T6SS unrelated ORF insertions, and is phylogenetically distant from the
Xanthomonas T6SS-I and T6SS-II, while is phylogenetically close to the R. solanacearum and
the C. taiwanensis T6SS-II.
E.p. strain Ep1/96 harbors one T6SS cluster which spans the region from EpC_06150 (vasD-
like) to EpC_06440 (vgrG2-like) and shares sequence and gene order homology with the one of
the E.a T6SS clusters [designated T6SS-II in Fig. 1, 2 and 3), starting from EAMY_3027 (vasD-
like) to EAMY_3000 (vgrG-like)]. These clusters are very close phylogenetic relatives and have
as next closest relative the Pantoea ananatis T6SS-II (Fig. 3). Furthermore, a small T6SS cluster of
four ORFs (not presented in Fig. 1) is present in both E.p. and E.a. (E.p.:EpC_19520-EpC_19550
and E.a.: EAMY_1620-EAMY_1623). E.a. also harbors a second T6SS cluster (designated T6SS-
III in Figs. 1, 2 and 3) which spans from EAMY_3228 (impB-like) to EAMY_3201 (vasL-like).
This cluster exhibits gene order and sequence relatedness to P. ananatis T6SS-III (Fig. 1). Similar
results were reported for E.p. DSM 12163T and E.a CFBP 1430 based on whole genome
sequence analysis (Smits et al., 2010). There are no experimental data concerning the biological
role of the T6SS in Erwinia spp. and most genes within the T6SS clusters are uncharacterized.
genes (ECA4275, ECA2866, ECA0456 and ECA3672), are also present. Interestingly, virulence
assays, performed with mutants in ECA3438 and ECA3444, in potato stems and tubers,
showed significantly reduced virulence compared with the wild type strain in both cases (Liu
et al., 2008). In our phylogenetic analysis the P.a. T6SS is presented as a member of a distinct
phylogenetic branch comprising the P.a. and Dickeya spp. T6SSs (Fig. 3).
tumefaciens (A.t.) have a wide host range among dicotyledonous plants, whereas other
possess a very limited host range [A. rubi (A.r.) and A. vitis (A.v.) form galls on raspberries
and grapes, respectively]. A. rhizogenes causes hairy roots on many plants. The ability to
cause disease is associated with transmissible plasmids which may move from one strain to
another. A.t. strain C58 is a representative of biovar I, which has also been extensively
modified for biotechnological uses. A.v. strain S4 is a virulent biovar III isolated from Vitis
vinifera (grape) cv. Izsaki Sarfeher crown galls in Kecskemet, Hungary in 1981 (Szegedi et al.,
1988; 1996). A.v. strains not only cause galls on grapevines but also necrosis on grapevine
roots and a hypersensitive response on non-host plants.
The two sequenced species, A.t. strain C58 and A.v. strain S4 seem to harbor almost identical
T6SS gene cluster. According to our database search, those loci are lying between Atu4330
(impN-like) and Atu4348 (vgrG-like) in A.t. C58 and between Avi_6039 (impN-like) and
Avi_6054 (hcp-like) in A.v. S4 (Fig. 1). A.v. seems to lack the vgrG-like gene upstream of the
clpV-like gene (Fig. 1), while A.t. carries a vgrG-like gene in the solitary locus Atu_3642
outside the T6SS cluster. However, the A.v. has five additional vgrG-like genes at the solitary
loci Avi_1646, Avi_2758, Avi_3254, Avi_7056, Avi_7557, which also are located outside the
T6SS cluster. Phylogenetically the Agrobacterium spp. T6SSs branch more closely to the
Rhizobium leguminosarum T6SS phylogenetic sub-group (Fig. 3).
genomic islands (Fig. 1). The T6SS-I spans from RHECIAT_PC0000958 (vgrG-like) to
RHECIAT_PC0000933 (impL-like). While the T6SS-II seems to be divided in two segments
with opposite gene orientations, located from RHECIAT_PB0000227 (impL-like) to
RHECIAT_PB0000224 (impJ-like) and from RHECIAT_PB0000217 (impA-like) to
RHECIAT_PB0000210 (vgrG-like). Furthermore, the Clp-like ATPase is absent in T6SS-II,
which raises questions about the functionality of the cluster (Fig. 1). Phylogenetically, the
four core proteins of the R.e. CIAT 652 T6SS-I are more closely related to those of the
Mesorhizobium loti T6SS, forming a distinct sub-group, while those of the T6SS-II branch with
the Xanthomonas spp. T6SS-I and T6SS-II, forming a separate sub-group (Fig. 3).
9. Prospects
Protein secretion is fundamental to bacterial virulence and several systems mediate
pathogenesis and other types of bacteria-host interaction. Beyond the other recognized
secretion systems of Gram-negative bacteria with established role in host-pathogen
interactions, the T6SS is of particular interest in this respect and has been shown to be
important for bacterial virulence and for interaction with the host in various ways, often
leading to anti-pathogenesis (Jani & Cotter, 2010). Nevertheless, its role and function in
most bacteria is not clearly established and formal evidence for protein
secretion/translocation into plant cells is scant. At present, we do not fully understand how
the T6SS works and are only beginning to understand the biological role/s of the T6SS in
plant-associated bacterial life. Multiple copies of T6SS in a single bacterial strain appear to
be a frequent phenomenon, and this holds true for many plant associated species. Recent
studies (Boyer et al., 2009; Filloux et al., 2008) have established the presence of multiple
copies of apparently complete and/or degenerate T6SS loci in about one quarter of the
proteobacterial genomes examined, that they generally display different phylogenetic
origins and are not a result of recent duplication events, suggesting sustained and
constrained mechanisms that favour this trend. Based on our own analysis (Sarris &
Scoulica, 2011; Sarris et al., 2011), most strains of Pseudomonas syringae, the insect
pathogenic Pseudomonas entomophila strain L48, the human opportunistic pathogen
Pseudomonas mendocina strain ymp, and most of the Pseudomonas strains studied by Barret
et al. (2011) typically carry T6SS from more than one phylogenetic clade and/or
additional vgrG and hcp genes.
Although the majority of the recent studies concern the contribution of T6SS in bacterial
pathogenicity (positively), many bacteria with genomes encoding putative T6SS are not
known to be pathogens or symbionts, and T6SS may also function in non-pathogenic
bacteria-host interactions and/or in interactions not involving eukaryotic partners. In R.
leguminosarum the T6SS limits host-range and in S. typhimurium and H. hepaticus the
evidence suggests a possible role of T6SS in limiting of bacterial virulence and, therefore,
contribution to host colonization (Bladergroen et al., 2003; Parsons & Heffron, 2005; Jani &
Cotter, 2010; Chow & Mazmanian, 2010). A relatively new twist in the systems repertoire of
biological functions in a broader context is the finding that bacteria engage each other in a
T6SS-dependent manner and can provide protection for a bacterium against cell contact-
induced growth inhibition caused by other species of bacteria (Hood et al., 2010; Schwarz et
al., 2010a). This leads to speculation that this pathway is of general significance to
interbacterial interactions in polymicrobial diseases and the environment.
T6SS clusters occur with high frequency, have divergent phylogenies and individual strains
or species often possess non-orthologous clusters with distinct or overlapping functions in
bacterial interactions with multiple hosts, antagonists or predators unsuspected at present.
In a recent study of the ocean metagenome (Persson et al., 2009) the T6SS was more
abundant among -proteobacteria than other protein transport systems. The weight of
present evidence suggests, at least indirectly, an apparently rampant lateral transfer of T6SS
clusters/genes in the microbial world, which could be a significant driver for newly
emerging pathogens, as proposed for the gastroenteritis agent E. tarda (Leung et al., 2011).
Phytobacterial Type VI Secretion System
Gene Distribution, Phylogeny, Structure and Biological Functions 77
Future studies are needed and expected to further advance the T6SS field. It is important to
remember that formal evidence of the translocation of effector proteins into plant cells
through T6SS is presently lacking, as is also the case for the molecular targets of these
effectors. Paraphrasing Schwarz et al. (2010a), outstanding questions for future research
on T6SS include the following: What are the physiological role(s) and adaptive
significance of T6S-mediated plant cell targeting in disease, symbiosis, and interbacterial
interactions in the environment? What is the significance of additional vgrG and hcp genes
Are host- and bacterial cell-targeting T6SSs discernible by sequence or gene content? Are
there T6SSs that can target both eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells? Are there other T6S
substrates that await identification? Given the resemblance T6SS components to
bacteriophage proteins it is also tempting to ask if T6SS transports only protein substrates
and/or other macromolecules as well.
It is instructive to point out that the genes coding for several secretion systems, including
T6SS, were first identified in phenotypic screens of mutants altered in their interaction with
higher eukaryotes. It is conceivable that new secretion systems may be identified in other
appropriately designed screens in multi-organism settings. Bioinformatic sourcing of
genome, transcriptome and proteome data may point to new potential candidates, as
occurred historically with the T6SS. Finally, the striking similarities between secretion
systems and type IV pili, flagella, bacteriophage tail, or efflux pumps invite speculation that
new systems may even be predicted, the way Mendeleev had anticipated characteristics of
yet unknown elements (Filloux, 2011b).
10. Acknowledgments
We apologize to any researchers whose work was not included in this review due to space
limitations. This work was supported by PYTHAGORAS, and PENED 03ED375 grants of
the Greek General Secretariat for Research and Development implemented within the
framework of the Reinforcement Programme of Human Research Manpower (PENED)
and co-financed by National and Community Funds (25% from the Greek Ministry of
Development General Secretariat of Research and Technology and 75% from EU-European
Social Fund) and by the EPEAEK graduate programs in Plant Molecular Biology and
Biotechnology and Protein Biotechnology of the Greek Ministry of Education, Lifelong
Learning and Religious Affairs.
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4
1. Introduction
Cut flower production and trade in the E.U. and the rest of the world holds the main share
within the ornamental horticulture industry. Despite the global economic crisis started in
2008, changes in cut flower trade, such as the merge of the 2 major auctions in Holland (i.e.
VBA and FloraHolland), resulted in stabilization or even small increases in stem number
sales for the years 2008-2010 (Evans & Van der Ploeg, 2008; Anonymous, 2011). In other
words, the importance of cut flower industry in global economy is undisputed, but also
reflects the human need for ornamental plant consumption as part of a better life.
Product quality of horticultural crops has been the main area of research the past decades.
Growers and sellers have been seeking for best possible product quality and highest
possible profits. However, problems in quality after pathogen infections at some point of
production, or during storage or transportation eventually result in economic losses (van
Meeteren, 2009). Botrytis cinerea is the single-most important pathogen infecting ornamental
plants and cut flowers postharvest and substantially reduce growers and sellers income by
increasing product rejections.
B. cinerea Pers. is a common fungal pathogen that infects glasshouse-grown ornamental
crops under cool and humid conditions with latent symptoms, which develop during
storage or transportation (Elad, 1988). Growers and sellers around the world are deeply
concerned by such infection problems. In Europe, for instance, large quantities of B. cinerea-
infected cut freesias from he Netherlands are rejected in the UK by wholesalers and
retailers at certain times of the year (Darras et al., 2004). These rejections result in immediate
economic losses and make cooperation between growers and importers problematical. The
problem is equally substantial for roses (Elad, 1988; Elad et al., 1993), gerberas (Salinas &
Verhoeff, 1995) and Geraldton waxflowers (Joyce, 1993), although species such as
chrysanthemum (Dirkse, 1982), narcissus (ONeill et al., 2004), lisianthus (Wegulo & Vilchez,
2007), dianthus, ranunculus and cyclamen (Seglie et al., 2009) eventually suffer infections by
B. cinerea, but to a lesser extend.
Infections by B. cinerea are usually managed by conventional fungicides applied protectively
at certain times of the year and especially during autumn and spring when most infections
occur. However, extensive use of fungicides such as dicarboximides, has led to the
86 Plant Pathology
1.1 Botrytis cinerea infecting cut flowers and ornamental pot plants
Botrytis cinerea Pers. belongs to the Class Deuteromycetes and the Phylum Ascomycota. The
disease caused by B. cinerea is called grey mold. The fungus is pathogenic to most of the
cultivated ornamental pot plants and cut flowers. For example, infection of gerbera (Gerbera
jamesonii) flowers occurs inside the glasshouse during crop cultivation, but symptoms
develop after a latent period at storage or transportation following fluctuations in
temperature (Salinas & Verhoeff, 1995). Favourable temperature and relative humidity (RH)
for the pathogen after harvest results in rapid disease development (Salinas et al., 1989).
Grey mold on gerbera and freesia flowers is observed as small necrotic, dark-brown fleck
lesions spots. Similar symptoms developed in the laboratory under controlled conditions
following artificial inoculation of gerbera or freesia inflorescences at temperatures ranging
from 4 to 25C (Salinas & Verhoeff, 1995; Darras et al., 2006a). Infection of freesia (Freesia
hybrida) inflorescences after artificial inoculation occurred in less than 24 h at 12C and 80-
90% RH. Even at the low temperature of 5C, disease symptoms were evident in a saturated
atmosphere (ca. 100% RH) within the first 24 h of incubation.
B. cinerea is also pathogenic to Geraldton waxflower (Chamelaucium uncinatum), the
Australian native plant which holds a high ornamental and commercial value (Joyce, 1993;
Tomas et al., 1995). Geraldton waxflower sprigs artificially inoculated with B. cinerea
showed increased abscission of flowers from their pedicels.
B. cinerea infects rose (Rosa hybrida) flowers and produces necrotic spots or blister-like
patches on petal surfaces (Pie & De Leeuw, 1991; Williamson et al., 1995). Infection has been
described by Elad (1988) as restricted, brown, volcano-like shaped lesions. B. cinerea
damages phylloclades of ruscus (Ruscus aculeatus) by causing small, dark water soaked
necrotic lesions encircled by a faint halo. These lesions later become brown without growing
in size (Elad et al., 1993).
Infection of lisianthus (Eustoma russellianum) flowers has been recently reported by Wegulo
& Vilchez (2007). Significant (P 0.03) positive correlations between stem lesion length of
naturally infected plants in the glasshouse (R = 0.74) and stem lesion length of artificially
inoculated ones (R = 0.62) with the disease incidence score, and with the percent of necrosis
(R = 0.71) of detached leaves were reported (Wegulo & Vilchez, 2007). From all the 12
lisianthus cultivars tested, 'Magic Champagne' was suggested as the most resistant and
proposed as ideal for commercial cultivation.
Novel Elicitors Induce Defense Responses in Cut Flowers 87
Virulent or avirulent
Resistant or susceptible genes in the plant
Pathogen genes
R (resistant) r (susceptible)
dominant recessive
According to this model, avr gene products secreted by hyphae or located on the surface of
the pathogen bind to a receptor located on the cell membranes of hosts epidermal cells.
Binding triggers a cascade of defence responses by the host. Every other possible match in
the system could lead to infection (Table 1). Thus, a combination of a resistant host gene
and a virulent pathogen leads to a compatible host-pathogen interaction. In both cases,
when an avr race of the pathogen matches with a susceptible host and a virulent pathogen
matches with a susceptible host, the host fails to recognize the pathogen and infection
occurs (Flor, 1971).
Culture filtrates or extracts from microbial cells can act as potent inducers of plant defence
responses (Chappell & Hahlbrock, 1984; Kombrink & Hahlbrock, 1986; Fritzemeier et al.,
88 Plant Pathology
1987; Keller et al., 1999). For instance, extracts from fungal cell walls when applied to plant
tissue induced the synthesis and accumulation of phytoalexins (Yoshikawa et al., 1993).
Active components in such chemical, biological and physical extracts are referred to as
elicitors. This term is now generally used to denote agents, which induce plant defence
responses, including accumulation of PR-proteins, cell wall structural (strengthening)
changes, and hypersensitive cell death (Kombrink & Hahlbrock, 1986).
interactions does the pathogen infect and colonize the host. Accumulation of phytoalexins
can occur as part of the HR (Dixon et al., 1994). However, it is not clear whether the HR
triggers the production of phytoalexins and other antimicrobial compounds or if their
accumulation is a direct result of elicitation (Kombrink & Somssich, 1995).
and jasmonic acid (Agrios, 1997). The importance of PR-proteins lies in their range of
defence activities (Van Loon et al., 1994). A number of PR-proteins release molecules that
may act as elicitors (Keen & Yoshikawa, 1983). PR-proteins accumulation has been observed
in monocots as well as in dicots (Redolfi, 1983). However, there is no published work on PR-
proteins induced in flower species. Eleven families of PR-proteins have been recognized so
far (Van Loon et al., 1994). Some inhibit pathogen development during microbial infection
by inhibiting fungal spore production and germination. Others are associated with
strengthening of the host cell wall via its outgrowths and papillae (Agrios, 1997). Both -1,3-
glucanases and chitinases, PR-2 and PR-3, respectively, are known to have direct antifungal
activity (Mauch et al., 1988; Van Loon, 1997). However, many pathogens have evolved
mechanisms to reduce the antifungal impact of PR-proteins (Van Loon, 1997). For example,
many chitin-containing fungi are not inhibited by host-produced chitinases.
Plant secondary metabolites are divided into the three main categories of terpenes, phenolic
compounds and nitrogen containing secondary metabolites (i.e. alkaloids) (Taiz & Zeiger,
1998). All secondary metabolites are produced through one of the major mevalonic, malonic
or shikimic pathways (Taiz & Zeiger, 1998). Phenylalanine is a common amino acid
produced via the shikimic pathway (Hahlbrock & Scheel, 1989). The most abundant
classes of secondary phenolic compounds in plants are derived from phenylalanine via
elimination of an ammonia molecule to form cinnamic acid. This reaction is catalyzed by
phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL), the key enzyme of phenylpropanoid metabolism
(Hahlbrock & Scheel, 1989). Derivatives of phenylpropanoid pathway include low-
molecular-weight flower pigments, antibiotic phytoalexins, UV-protectants, insect
repellents, and signal molecules in plant-microbe interactions (Hahlbrock & Scheel, 1989;
Kombrink & Somssich, 1995).
The main phenylpropanoid pathway branches leading to formation of flavonoids,
isoflavonoids, coumarins, soluble esters, wall bound phenolics, lignin and suberin. This
diverse spectrum of compounds has a wide range of properties (Hahlbrock & Scheel, 1989).
For example, the lignin pathway is an important phenylpropanoid pathway branch that
produces precursors for lignin deposition (Grisebach, 1981). Various enzymes implicated in
the biosynthesis of lignin appeared to be induced in plants in response to infection or elicitor
treatment (Matern & Kneusel, 1988). However, not all studies show a role of lignin and cell
lignification in disease inhibition (Garrod et al., 1982). Furanocoumarins derived from the
furanocoumarin pathway in parsley are considered potent phytoalexins (Beier & Oertli,
1983). Flavonoid and furanocoumarin production as a response to UV light or fungal elicitor
treatment respectively was associated with up-regulation of PAL, 4-coumarate: CoA-ligase
(4CL) and chalcone synthase (CHS). Up-regulation was based on rapid changes in amounts
and activities of the corresponding mRNAs (Chappell & Hahlbrock, 1984).
After pathogen recognition by the host, a cascade of early responses is induced including
ion fluxes, phosphorylation events, and generation of active oxygen species (Kombrink &
Somssich, 1995). SA acts as a secondary signal molecule and its levels increase during the
defence induction process. Thus, SA is required for initiation of synthesis of various
defence-related proteins such as the PR-proteins (Van Loon, 1997; Metraux, 2001). SA
accumulation endogenously in tobacco and cucumber plants lead to the HR and the SAR
responses. However, SA is not necessarily the translocated signal (elicitor) for the onset of
SAR. Rather, SA exerts an effect locally (Vernooij et al., 1994; Ryals et al., 1996). Nonetheless,
Novel Elicitors Induce Defense Responses in Cut Flowers 91
SA is still required for SAR expression (Van Loon, 1997). The importance of SA in the onset
of SAR was determined using transgenic tobacco and Arabidopsis plants engineered to
over-express SA-hydroxylase. Transformed plants with the naphthalene hydroxylase G
(NahG) gene produced low levels of SA and SAR expression was blocked.
SA is produced from phenylalanine via coumaric and benzoic acid (Mauch-Mani and
Slusarenko, 1996; Ryals et al., 1996; Sticher et al., 1997). Biosynthesis of SA starts with the
conversion of phenylalanine to trans-cinnamic acid (Sticher et al., 1997). From trans-
cinnamic acid, either benzoic acid (BA) or ortho-coumaric acid are produced. Both
compounds are SA precursors (Sticher et al., 1997). Pallas et al. (1996) showed that tobacco
plants epigenetically suppressed in PAL expression produced a much lower concentration
of SA and other phenylpropanoid derivatives when artificially inoculated with tobacco
mosaic virus (TMV). This was seen, firstly, due to the lack of resistance to TMV upon
secondary infection, and, secondly, to the absence of PR protein induction in systemic leaves
(Pallas et al., 1996).
Jasmonic acid (JA) and its methyl ester (MeJA) are derived from linolenic acid. They are
cyclopentanine-based compounds that occur naturally in many plant species (Sembdner &
Parthier, 1993; Creelman & Mullet, 1997). Linolenic acid levels or its availability could
determine JA biosynthetic rate (Farmer & Ryan, 1992; Conconi et al., 1996). The level of JA in
plants varies as a function of tissue and cell type, developmental stage, and in response to
various environmental stimuli (Creelman & Mullet, 1997). For example, in soybean
seedlings, JA levels are higher in the hypocotyls hook (a zone of cell division) and young
plumules as compared to the zone of cell elongation and more mature regions of the stem,
older leaves and roots (Creelman & Mullet, 1997). High JA levels are also found in flowers
and pericarp tissues of developing reproductive structures (Creelman & Mullet, 1997).
Jasmonates are wide spread in Angiosperms, Gymnosperms and algae (Parthier, 1991). They
can mediate gene expression in response to various environmental and developmental
processes (Wasternack & Parthier, 1997). These processes include wounding (Schaller &
Ryan, 1995), pathogen attack (Epple et al., 1997), fungal elicitation (Nojiri et al., 1996), touch
(Sharkey, 1996), nitrogen storage (Staswick, 1990), and cell wall strengthening (Creelman et
al., 1992). Wounding of tomato leaves produced an 18-amino acid polypeptide called
systemin, the first polypeptide hormone discovered in plants so far (Pearce et al., 1991).
Systemin was released from damaged cells into the apoplast and transported out of the
wounded leaf via the phloem (Schaller & Ryan, 1995) (Fig. 1).
Upon herbivore wounding, a systemic signal is delivered from systemin and results in an
ABA-dependent rise of linoleic acid. Systemin was believed to bind to the plasma
membrane of target cells and thereby initiate JA biosynthesis (Schaller & Ryan, 1995). JA
accumulation can also be induced by oligosaccharides derived from plant cell walls and by
elicitors, such as chitosans derived from fungal cell walls (Gundlach et al., 1992; Doares et
al., 1995; Nojiri et al., 1996). JA also activates gene expression encoding proteinase inhibitors
(Creelman & Mullet, 1997). Proteinase inhibitors are known antidigestive proteins that block
the action of herbivore proteolytic enzymes (Creelman & Mullet, 1997). Thereby, proteinase
inhibitors help the host to avoid consumption by herbivores. Proteinase inhibitors were
accumulated in tomato plants after wounding (ODonnell et al., 1996) and after irradiation
with UV-C (Conconi et al. 1996). In response to wounding, ethylene and JA act together to
regulate gene expression of proteinase inhibitors (ODonnell et al., 1996). Exposing tomato
92 Plant Pathology
leaves to increasing doses of 254 nm UV-C resulted in increased proteinase inhibitors gene
expression. Expression of proteinase inhibitors in wounded (Doares et al., 1995; ODonnell
et al., 1996) or UV-C treated (Conconi et al., 1996) tomato leaves was markedly reduced
upon treatment with SA. From linoleic acid, jasmonic acid is produced. Ethylene is required
in the jasmonic-signalling cascade (ODonnell et al., 1995).
Herbivore wounding
Local signals
Oligogalacturo
Oligo
nide
- Chitosan Burning
galacturonide
Systemin Systemic
translocat i l
signal Ultraviolet
ed in the radiation
phloem
Membrane
ABA
Linoleic acis
COOH
Lipoxygenase
Allene oxide
synthase
O
12-oxo-PDA
COOH
Jasmonic acid
COOH
Gene expression
Fig. 1. The octadecanoid-signalling pathway for defence gene expression in tomato (Schaller
and Ryan, 1995).
Novel Elicitors Induce Defense Responses in Cut Flowers 93
1.2.3 Systemic defence responses (i.e. SAR, ISR) and signalling pathways
SAR is activated following induction of local acquired resistance (LAR). SAR is potentially
induced after the HR and after challenge with virulent strains of a pathogen or elicitor
treatment. It develops systemically in distant parts of the infected plant (Lawton et al., 1996;
Ryals et al., 1996; Metraux, 2001). SAR protects plants from a broad range of potential
pathogens (Kessmann et al, 1994).
Specific genes induced in different plant species during SAR have been called SAR-genes
(Kessmann et al., 1994; Stermer, 1995; Ryals et al., 1996; Sticher et al., 1997). Most of SAR-
genes encode PR-proteins such as those accumulated after inoculation of tobacco with TMV
(Ward et al., 1991). These include PR-1 (PR-1a, PR-1b, PR-1c), -1,3-glucanases (PR-2a, PR-
2b, PR-2c), chitinases (PR-3a, PR-3b), hevein-like proteins (PR-4a, PR-4b), thaumatin like
proteins (PR-5a, PR-5b), acidic and basic isoforms of class III chitinase, an extracellular -1,3-
glucanase and the basic isoform of PR-1 (Ward et al., 1991). SAR and SAR-gene activation
has been observed in various dicots (Kessmann et al., 1994; Ryals et al., 1996). SAR
activation involves species specificity (Ryals et al., 1992). For example, acidic PR-1 is only
weakly expressed in cucumber. In contrast, acidic PR-1 is the main protein accumulating in
tobacco and Arabidopsis. A number of homologous SAR-genes have been identified in
monocots. Homologs of the PR-1 family were found in maize and barley and other PR-
proteins in maize (Nasser et al., 1988). Gorlach et al. (1996) isolated a group of wheat genes
(WCI or wheat chemically induced) induced after chemical treatment with potent SAR
inducers. WCI genes seemed to act in a similar manner to SAR-genes in dicots after chemical
treatment with plant activators (Gorlach et al., 1996).
Recent research has revealed that JA and ethylene play key roles in signal transduction
pathways associated with plant defence responses (Pieterse and van Loon, 1999; Thomma et
al., 2000). Inoculation with a necrotizing pathogen resulted predominantly in activation of
the SA-dependent SAR response. This response leads to the accumulation of salicylic acid
inducible PR-proteins and the expression of SAR (Ryals et al., 1996; Pieterse & van Loon,
1999) (Fig. 2, pathway 2). JA and ethylene inducible defence responses are induced by non-
necrotizing rhizobacteria and lead to the ISR phenomenon (Pieterse et al., 1996; Pieterse et
al., 1998) (Fig. 2, pathway 1). Both pathways 1 and 2 are regulated in Arabidopsis plants
carrying the NPR1 gene.
Depending on the invading pathogen, the composition of defence compounds produced
after infection can vary between SA- and JA/ethylene-inducible pathways (Fig. 2, pathways
2 and 3) (Ryals et al., 1996; Epple et al., 1997; Dong, 1998).
Wounding can also result in JA and ethylene inducible defence response activation (Fig. 2,
pathway 4) (ODonnell et al., 1996; Wasternack & Parthier, 1997). However, resultant
products of the wounding pathway differ from those induced upon pathogen infection
(ODonnell et al., 1996; Rojo et al., 1999). A second distinct wound-signalling pathway
leading to wound responsive (WR) gene expression has been found in Arabidopsis plants
(Titarenko et al., 1997; Rojo et al., 1998) (Fig. 2, pathway 6). Upon wounding, Arabidopsis
plants carrying the coi1 (JA-insensitive) mutant gene expressed the wound responsive genes
choline kinase (CK) and wound responsive (WR3) indicating that the induced pathway was
totally independent of JA. UV irradiation of tomato leaves also resulted in induction of the
same defensive genes normally activated through the octadecanoid pathway after
wounding (Conconi et al., 1996). This response is blocked after SA treatment, confirming the
94 Plant Pathology
antagonistic regulation of the two distinct pathways (Pena-Cortes et al., 1993; Lawton et al.,
1995; Xu et al., 1994; Doares et al., 1995; ODonnell et al., 1996; Niki et al., 1998; Gupta et al.,
2000; Rao et al., 2000).
In the rhizobacteria-mediated induced systemic resistance (ISR) pathway, components from
the JA/ethylene response acted in sequence in activating a systemic resistance response that,
like pathogen induced SAR, was dependent on the regulatory protein NPR1 (Pieterse & van
Loon, 1999). The ISR pathway shares signalling events with pathways initiated upon
pathogen infection, but is not associated with the activation of genes encoding plant
defensins, thionins or PR-proteins (Pieterse & van Loon, 1999) (Fig. 2, pathway 3). This
observation indicates that ISR inducing rhizobacteria, such as P. fluorescens strain WCS417r,
trigger a novel signalling pathway leading to the production of so far unidentified defense
compounds (Pieterse et al., 1996; Pietrese et al., 1998). Protection of NahG Arabidopsis
plants by gaseous MeJA suggested that induction of a SA non-dependent systemic pathway
was regulated by JA (Thomma et al., 2000) (Fig. 2, pathway 3). Protection was provided
against two necrotrophic fungi, A. brassicicola and B. cinerea.
1 2 3
Necrosis
JA response
4 6
Induced ASM
Host Pathogen Reference
response concentration
Apple seedlings -1,3-
Brisset et al.,
cv. Golden Erwinia amylovora glucanases, 0.1-0.2 g AI L-1
2000
Delicious peroxidases
Cauliflower 0.0015-0.075 g Godard et al.,
Peronospora parasitica ns
(Brassica oleracea) AI L-1 1999
Erysiphe graminis,
Septoria spp., Puccinia
Cereals, tobacco ns 12-30 g AI ha-1 Ruess et al., 1996
spp., Peronospora
hyoscyami f. sp. tabacina
Acidic
Cucumber peroxidase,
Cladosporium Narusaka et al.,
(Cucumis sativus class III 32.4 g AI L-1
cucumerinum 1999
L.) chitinase and -
1,3-glucanase
Cucumber
(Cucumis sativus
L.) and Japanese
Many pathogens ns 0.05-0.1 g AI L-1 Ishii et al., 1999
pear (Pyrus
pyrifolia Nakai
var. culta Nakai)
Cauliflower -1,3-glucanase.
P. parasitica 0.05 g AI L-1 Ziadi et al., 2001
(Brassica oleracea) PR-1 and PR-5
Grapevine cv
B. cinerea na 0.3 mM Iriti et al., 2004
Merlot
Fusarium spp.,
Melons cv. Early Alternaria spp., 0.025 or 0.05 g Huang et al.,
ns
Yellow Hami Rhizopus spp. AI L-1 2000
Trichothecium sp.
96 Plant Pathology
Induced ASM
Host Pathogen Reference
response concentration
ascorbate
peroxidase,
guaiacol Gondim et al.,
Melon fruit Fusarium pallidoroseum
peroxidase, 2008
PAL, -1,3-
glucanase
Parsley cells
With or without elicitor 0.32-6.48 g
(Petroselinum PAL, coumarins Katz et al., 1998
(Pmg) AI L-1
crispum L.)
Pepper
Xanthomonas campestris 1.25-5 g Buonaurio et al.,
(Capsicum ns
pv. vesicatoria AI L-1 2002
annuum L.)
Soybean 0.035-0.375 g
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum ns Dann et al., 1998
seedlings AI L-1
Strawberry
plants cvs. 0.25-2 g Terry and Joyce,
B. cinerea ns
Elsanta and AI L-1 2000
Andana
chitinase and -
Strawberry Microbial populations 0.05-0.5 g.L-1 Cao et al., 2010
1,3-glucanase
Pseudomonas syringae
Tobacco plants
pv tabaci, Thanatephorus 0.05-30 g
cv. Kutsaga ns Cole, 1999
cucumeris, Cercospora AI L-1
Mammoth 10
nicotianae
Callose
Tomato plants enriched wall
Fusarium oxysporum 97.2 g Benhamou &
(Lycopersicon appositions
f.sp. radicis-lycopersici AI L-1 Belanger, 1998
esculentum) phenolic
compounds
Tomato plants Cucumber mosaic virus
ns 0.1 mM Anfoka, 2000
cv. Vollendung (CMV)
Erysiphe graminis f.sp. Gorlach et al.,
Wheat WCI genes (1-5) 0.3 mM
tritici 1996
Table 2. Effects of ASM on different host-pathogen interactions (ns: not shown, na: not
applicable).
Although, most of ASM application were carried out preharvest, there is number of
published research on ASM postharvest applications (i.e. Cao et al., 2010). Additionally, a
considerable work on postharvest application of ASM on ornamentals has been published
the recent years (i.e. Darras et al., 2007). ASM was introduced as a potent inducer of SAR
and treated plants were resistant to the same spectrum of diseases as plants activated
naturally (Kessmann et al., 1996; Friedrich et al., 1996). Although ASM and its metabolites
exhibited no direct antimicrobial activity towards plant pathogens tested, they induced the
same biochemical processes in the plant as those observed after natural activation of SAR
(Friedrich et al., 1996; Lawton et al., 1996). The compound, which was inactive in plants that
do not express the SAR-signaling pathway, required a lag time of approximately 30 days
between application and protection (Lawton et al., 1996).
Novel Elicitors Induce Defense Responses in Cut Flowers 97
Induced MeJA
Host Pathogen Reference
response concentration
B. cinerea,
Arabidopsis 0.5-50 M and
A.brassicicola, Thomma et
(Arabidopsis ns 0.001-1 L L-1
Plectosphaerella al., 2000
thaliana) air
cucumerina
Arabidopsis
Penninckx et
(Arabidopsis A. brassicicola PDF1.2 45 M
al., 1996
thaliana)
Grapefruit
(Citrus paradisi) Penicillium Droby et al.,
ns 1-50 M
var. Marsh digitatum 1999
Seedless
Constabel
Large number
na PPO na and Ryan,
of species
1998
chitinase and
Colletotrichum Cao et al.,
Loquat fruit -1,3- 10 mol L-1
acutatum 2008
glucanase
Potato plants
Phytophthora Ilinskaya et
(Solanum phytoalexins 1-10 M
infestans al., 1996
tuberosum)
PAL, -1,3- Yao & Tian,
Sweet cherry Monilinia fructicola 0.2 mM
glucanase 2005
-
glucuronidase
Tobacco cell Xu et al.,
na (GUS), 0.045-4550 M
cultures 1994
osmotin
protein
Phytophthora
parasitica var. -
Tobacco cv. Mitter et al.,
nicotianae, glucuronidase 45 M
Xanthi-nc 1998
Cercospora (GUS)
nicotianae, TMV
Tomato plants
Helicoverpa zea, PPO, POD, Thaler et al.,
(Lycopersicon 0.1-10 mM
Spodoptera exigua LOX and PIs 1996
esculentum)
Tomato plants Spodoptera exigua,
Thaler et al.,
(Lycopersicon Pseudomonas PPO 1 mM
1999
esculentum) syringae pv. tomato
able 3. Effects of MeJA on different host-pathogen interactions. (ns: not shown, na: not
applicable).
98 Plant Pathology
Although, firstly tested preharvest, JA or MeJA has been extensively used postharvest at
different hosts (i.e. fruits, vegetables, cut flowers), application modes (i.e. spray, pulse, gas)
and incubation environments (i.e. storage or ambient temperatures). For example, JA and
MeJA were tested on grapefruit for suppressing postharvest green mold decay [Penicillium
digitatum (Pers.:Fr.) Sacc.] (Droby et al., 1999). Studies showed that 50 M and 1 M MeJA
concentrations were effective against the disease and that the reduction in the decay was the
same at incubation temperatures of 2 or 20C. Moreover, as the in-vitro tests showed no
direct antifungal activity of JA and MeJA, it was suggested that the disease suppression was
achieved via natural resistance induction (Droby et al., 1999). Treatment of Arabidopsis
plants with MeJA reduced A. brassicicola, B. cinerea and Plectosphaerella cucumerina disease
development (Thomma et al., 2000). Application of gaseous MeJA to plants resulted in a
greater disease reduction compared to that on plants sprayed with MeJA or treated with
INA. Gaseous MeJA protected SA-degrading transformant NahG plants, suggesting that
gaseous MeJA induced a non-SA dependent systemic response (Thomma et al., 2000).
Combination of ASM and JA was tested against bacterial and insect attack on field grown
tomato plants (Thaler et al., 1999). Two signaling pathways, one involving SA and another
involving JA were proposed to provide resistance against pathogens and insect herbivores,
respectively (Thaler et al., 1999).
Application
Host Elicitor Target pathogen method and Reference
timing
a. Cut flowers
Spray - Suo & Leung,
Rose (Rosa hybrida) ASM Diplocarpon rosae
preharvest 2002
Pulse, spray - Meir et al., 1998;
MeJA B. cinerea
postharvest 2005
Gerbera (Gerbera Darras et al.,
UV-C B. cinerea Postharvest
jamesonii) 2012
MeJA & Spray - Darras et al.,
Freesia (Freesia hybrida) B. cinerea
ASM preharvest 2006b
Pulse, spray, gas Darras et al.,
MeJA B. cinerea
- postharvest 2005; 2007
ASM,
Sunflower plants Spray - Dimitriev et al.,
MeJA, B. cinerea
(Helianthus annuus) preharvest 2003
SA, INA
Sunflower plants Plasmopara
ASM Spray - preharvest Tosi et al., 1999
(Helianthus annuus) helianthi
Geraldton waxflower Alternaria sp., Spray -
SA Beasley, 2001
(Chamelaucium uncinatum) Epicoccum sp. preharvest
MeJA B. cinerea Gas - postharvest Eyre et al., 2006
MeJA & Spray pre- and Dinh et al.,
B. cinerea
ASM postharvest 2007; 2008
Peonies (Paeonia lactiflora) MeJA B. cinerea Gas - postharvest Gast, 2001
b. Pot plants
Fusarium
Cyclamen (Cyclamen Spray -
ASM oxysporum f. sp. Elmer, 2006a
persicum) preharvest
cyclaminis
Phytophthora Spray - Becktell et al.,
Petunia (Petunia hybrida)
infestans preharvest 2005
c. Landscape architecture
plants
Fusarium
Injection in the
Date palm ASM oxysporum f. sp. Jaiti et al., 2009
trunk
albedinis
d. Propagation material
Fusarium
Gladiolus corms
ASM oxysporum f. sp. Dip Elmer, 2006b
(Gladiolus x hortulanus)
gladioli
Table 4. Chemical and biological elicitors tested on cut flowers and ornamental pot plants
against various pathogens infecting either pre- or postharvest.
100 Plant Pathology
Chemical elicitors such as ASM have been applied in pot ornamentals such as petunia
(Becktell et al., 2005), cyclamen (Elmer, 2006a) and in gladiolus corms (Elmer, 2006b), but
effectiveness varied within the different experimental designs and conditions. In cyclamen,
infection by Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. cyclaminis was reduced with increasing ASM doses
(Elmer, 2006a). Additionally, the dry mass of ASM treated cyclamen plants increased with
increasing ASM rates. However, as no further assays were carried out to assess possible
induction of defence responses, it was not clear whether ASM reduced F. oxysporum f.sp.
cyclaminis via induction of defence mechanisms or via a profound fungitoxic effect. It has
been demonstrated in other research that ASM may exert direct toxic activity against B.
cinerea (Darras et al., 2006b). In addition, ASM did not confer a significant level of protection
on gladiolus corms against F. oxysporum f. sp. gladioli, and compared to conventional
fungicides, although, the number of emerging flower spikes increased significantly
compared to the ASM-untreated corms (Elmer, 2006b).
induced a range of defence mechanisms to halt infection development. MeJA applied post-
harvest as vapour at 1-100 L L-1 significantly reduced the development of B. cinerea on cut
Geraldton waxflower Purple Pride and Mullering Brook sprigs (Eyre et al., 2006). In a
very recent study, Darras et al. (2011) demonstrated that gaseous MeJA at 0.1 L L-1
significantly increased polythenol oxidase (PPO) activities 24 and 36 h post-treatment. This
observation suggests that MeJA-induced defence mechanisms might be associated with the
production of quinones (Constabel and Ryan, 1998), which probably helped in B. cinerea
disease reduction. The effects of PPO in B. cinerea disease control have been confirmed for
gerbera flowers (Darras et al., 2012). A low dose of UV-C irradiation increased PPO activity
and was positively correlated with the reduction of B. cinerea disease symptoms on the
florets (Darras et al., 2012). This indicates that PPO might play an important role in B. cinerea
disease control on cut flowers.
Fig. 3. B. cinerea necrotic lesions on artificially inoculated freesia cv. Cote dAzur flowers
treated with 0.1 L L-1 gaseous MeJA (left) or left un-treated (control) (right) and incubated
for 48 h at 20C (Darras, 2003).
102 Plant Pathology
Lesion diameters on the detached freesia petals were significantly reduced with increasing
MeJA spray, pulse or gaseous concentrations (Darras et al., 2007). The first published
evidence of postharvest MeJA spray treatments enhancing protection of cut flowers against
B. cinerea was the work by Meir et al. (2005) on cut roses. According to Meir et al. (2005),
simultaneous MeJA pulsing and spraying under handling conditions resulted in
suppression of gray mold in seven rose cultivars (Eskimo, Profita, Tamara, Sun Beam,
Pink Tango, Carmen, Golden Gate). In an earlier study MeJA applied as a pulse variably
reduced B. cinerea lesion numbers and diameters (Meir et al., 1998). Our findings are in
agreement with those by Meir et al. (1998) that disease severity in both artificially inoculated
and naturally infected rose flowers was reduced by a MeJA pulse at 0.2 mM at 20C. On cut
Geraldton waxflower Purple Pride and Mullering Brook sprigs, 1-100 L L-1 MeJA
postharvest vapour treatment significantly reduced the development of B. cinerea (Eyre et
al., 2006). However, it also induced flower fall incidence, which was correlated with a
systemic resistance-associated up-regulation of ethylene biosynthesis.
Irrespective to the concentration tested, ASM provided no protection to artificially
inoculated freesia flowers (Darras et al., 2007). However, natural infection was significantly
(P < 0.05) reduced after ASM treatment during storage at 5 and at 12C. On the contrary,
postharvest treatments of strawberry cv. Camarosa fruit with ASM failed to reduce natural
infection by B. cinerea at 5C (Terry & Joyce, 2004b). Generally, ASM tended to provide
protection on freesia flowers at lower incubation temperatures (Darras et al., 2007).
However, it was not clear whether such disease reductions were the result of the induction
of hosts defence responses or a direct fungitoxic activity measured in the same study.
Likewise, Terry & Joyce (2000) showed that ASM reduced in-vitro B. cinerea mycelial growth
on ASM-amended agar. It is possible that the limited disease control on freesia flowers at
5C was due to direct toxic effect of ASM rather than via SAR induction.
Elicitation of defence responses in cut flowers is an interesting prospect for B. cinerea disease
control especially as it may offer alternatives to fungicide application. In series of
postharvest experiments with freesia inflorescences the potential to induce natural defence
mechanisms or directly controlling B. cinerea disease by application of biological and
chemical elicitors was investigated. Postharvest treatments with ASM, MeJA or UV-C
irradiation markedly suppressed B. cinerea specking on freesia petals by reducing disease
severity, lesion numbers and lesion diameters. However, attempts to further minimise
disease damage caused by B. cinerea using combined treatments with different plant
activators (i.e. both ASM and MeJA), were not successful (Darras et al., 2011).
In summary, ASM was the least effective in reducing B. cinerea specking on cut freesia
flowers (Fig. 4). In addition, it remained unclear as to whether or not SAR was induced. In
contrast, gaseous MeJA reduced disease severity most probably by inducing JA-
dependant biochemical responses. These contrasting results tend to concur with
observations by Pieterse & van Loon (1999) and Thomma et al. (2001) that SA- versus JA-
dependent pathways are effective against different pathogens. The results of a most recent
paper (i.e. Darras et al., 2011)) suggested that, SA-dependant pathway and consequently
the SAR response was not effective in freesia flowers against B. cinerea infection. In
contrast, the JA-dependant pathway was apparently induced and suppressive of B. cinerea
infection (Darras et al., 2011).
Novel Elicitors Induce Defense Responses in Cut Flowers 103
Induction of PPO,
MeJA gas Suppression of PAL At 20C, 0.1L L -1 MeJA gas reduced disease severity,
Postharvest lesion numbers and lesion diameters by 68, 56 and 50%,
treatment before respectively.
artificial
inoculation
Inactivation of B.
UV-C cinerea conidia UV-C irradiation with 1 kj m -2, reduced disease severity,
Postharvest lesion numbers and lesion diameters b y 74 68 and 14%,
treatment before respectively.
and after artificial
inoculation
No effect on PAL
activity At 5C, 0.15 g A.I. L -1 acibenzolar reduced disease
Acibenzolar severity, lesion numbers and lesion diameters by. 18,
Postharvest 30 and 43%, respectively.
treatment before
artificial
inoculation
Fig. 4. Ranking, in terms of relative efficacy, of postharvest biological (i.e. UV-C) and
chemical (i.e. ASM, MeJA) elicitors tested on cut freesia inflorescences to control B. cinerea
infection starting with the most effective (Darras, 2003).
104 Plant Pathology
warranted to help interpret the MeJA mode of action in cut flowers. Also, additional in-
planta trials on extra freesia varieties and a wider range of MeJA concentrations may help in
better understanding MeJA efficacy.
In view to the promising results using MeJA, it is likely that elicitor based strategies within
IDM could be used for the control of Botrytis or other pathogens on freesias and ornamental
pot plants, as well as on various cut flowers. In turn, IDM would minimise the risk of
pathogens developing resistance to fungicides and also reduce public concerns over
extensive fungicide use (Jacobsen & Backman, 1993).
More research could be undertaken into potential synergistic effects of combined pre- and
postharvest treatments with plant activators and/or abiotic biological agents (i.e. UV-C
irradiation). In due course, pre and/or postharvest use of plant activators could have
commercial potential for postharvest disease suppression (Kessmann et al., 1994;
Kessmann et al., 1996; Thaler et al., 1996; Meir et al., 1998; Huang et al., 2000; (Darras et
al., 2011).
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5
1. Introduction
In the course of coevolution of plants and pathogens for many millions of years, plants
possessed many kinds of recognition and resistance mechanisms to prevent or limit
pathogen infection. At the same time, pathogen also initiated many pathogenicity
mechanisms, such as development of specialized infection structures, secretion of hydrolytic
enzymes, production of host selective toxins, and detoxification of plant antimicrobial
compounds (Idnurm and Howlett, 2001; Talbot, 2003; Randall et al., 2005), to avoid or
overcome plant resistance mechanism. However, filamentous pathogen including fungi and
oomycete could secrete a diverse array of effector proteins into the plant cell to manipulate
the plant innate immunity, which facilitates the pathogen to successfully colonize and
reproduce (Birch et al., 2006; Chisholm et al., 2006; Kamoun, 2006; OConnell and Panstruga,
2006; Catanzariti et al., 2007; Kamoun, 2007). Several studies have shown that effector
proteins could play dual role as both toxins and inducers of host resistance. Effector proteins
were regarded as functioning primarily in virulence, but they also could elicit innate
immunity in plant varieties carrying corresponding resistance protein.
Rice blast caused by Magnaporthe oryzae (Couch and Kohn, 2002) is the most devastating
fungal disease of rice (Oryza sativa; Zeigler et al., 1994; Talbot, 2003). Functional
identification of M. oryzae effectors can elucidate some pathogenicity mechanisms of the
blast fungus, providing a clue to better manage blast disease. Several Avr genes have been
cloned and characterized from M.oryzae, such as Avr-Pita (Orbach et al., 2000; Valent et al.,
1991), Avr1-CO39 (Farman and Leong, 1998), Ace1 (Bohnert et al., 2004; Collemare et al.,
2008) and the Pwl effectors (Kang et al.,1995; Sweigard et al., 1995). The Avr-Pita effector
appears homologous to fungal zinc-dependent metalloproteases and is dispensable for
virulence on rice (Jia et al., 2001; Orbach et al., 2000). Avr-Pita interacts with the cognate
resistance protein Pi-ta (Jia et al., 2000). Avr-Pita1 (Avr-Pita) including Avr-Pita2 and Avr-
Pita3 are Avr-Pita family (Khang et al., 2008). Avr-Pita2 acts as an elicitor of defense
responses mediated by Pi-ta, while Avr-Pita3 does not. Members of Avr-Pita family are
detected among blast isolates isolated from different kinds of hosts by PCR-based method.
Ace1 effector is a putative cytoplasmic fusion polypeptide containing a polyketide synthase
(PKS) and a nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS), two distinct classes of enzymes that
are involved in the production of microbial secondary metabolites (Bohnert et al., 2004;
118 Plant Pathology
Fig. 1. Length distribution of predicted secretory (Sec-type) signal peptide of short protein in
M. oryzae.
Because signal peptide has common application value in exogenous gene expression, it was
necessary to analyze their composition and structure. We analyzed amino acid composition
of 116 Sec-type signal peptides sequence. Frequency of 20 kinds of amino acids in 116 signal
peptides sequences of secreted proteins were analyzed (Figure 2). Result showed that
nonpolar amino acids such as alanine, leucine, proline and valine have the highest
frequency(45.79%), followed by negatively charged acidic amino acids including aspartic
acid, glutamic acid, phenylalanine, histidine, isoleucine, threonine, methionine, tryptophan
and tyrosine (33.49%). The frequency of polar amino acids (glycine, asparagines, glutarnine,
serine) positively charged basic amino acids such as arginine and lysine had the lowest
frequency (15.83%).
microorganisms (Clare et al., 2004). The plasmids of pMALMgNIP04 and pMAL were
induced to express of fusion proteins of MBP-MgNIP04 andMBP.
+ mean gene was examined in isolates, -mean gene was not examined in isolates.
Table 1. Frequency of 45 genes in 21 isolates of M. oryzae from Yunnan, China.
122 Plant Pathology
All expression levels of candidate genes were normalized by actin housekeeping gene and
quantified by both the comparative threshold method and standard curve method. The
results showed that expression levels of all candidate genes were significantly different in
isolates of 94-64-1b Y99-63, 95-23-4a, Y98-16 and 94-64-1b. When two isolates of Y98-16 and
Y99-63 grown under complete medium and nitrogen-starvation medium, relative expression
quantity of genes was different. Expression of more genes was detected when two isolates
grew under nitrogen starvation for 24 h, than when the two isolates grew under complete
medium (Figure 3).
Fig. 3. Expression pattern of some predicted effector protein-encoding genes from M.oryzae.
a: Relative expression quantity of target gene of Y99-63 and Y98-16 cultured in different
mediums using 2C t method
b: Relative expression quantity of target gene of Y99-63 and Y98-16 cultured in different
mediums using the standard curve method.
We detected expression level of all candidate genes at 24 hpi, 48 hpi, 72 hpi, 96 hpi and 168
hpi. Results revealed that all gene expression levels were apparently up-regulated, achieved
the maximum at 48hpi, but decreased after 72 hpi (Table 2 and Figure 4).
124 Plant Pathology
Fig. 4. Expression pattern of some predicted effector protein-encoding genes in infected rice
leaves.
a: Relative expression amount of target gene in infected rice leaves at different stages post
inoculation using 2 Ct method
b: Relative expression amount of target gene in infected rice leaves at different stages post
inoculation using stand curve method.
Functional Identification of Genes Encoding Effector Proteins in Magnaporthe oryzae 125
Table 2. Relative expression quantity of target gene in infected rice leaves at different stages
post inoculation.
expression was detected at all time points when transformant inoculating rice. The
expression of OsPR4 was only detected at 168hpi during transformant inoculating rice.
Based on these data, the most tested defense-related genes expression pattern was not any
different between Y98-16 and transformant of MgNIP04::GFP, which indicated MgNIP04
quantitatively influenced pathogenicity of blast fungus.
Strain Replicate group Protein spots Protein matched spots Match Rate 1 Match Rate 2
*
Y98-16 3 25310 25310 100% 100%
Y99-63 3 26210 1328 50.4% 52.2%
Note: * mean master reference gel; Match rate 1 for the match-point block of gel protein spots
representing the ratio; Match rate 2 is the ratio of match point to total master.
Table 3. Comparison of 2-DE maps of two strains in M.oryzae.
Functional Identification of Genes Encoding Effector Proteins in Magnaporthe oryzae 127
Fig. 5. 2-DE maps of Y99-63 and Y98-16.Protein spots labeled with arrow (1 to 5)are co-
expressed in two strains of Y99-63 and Y98-16 with the pI ranging from 5.5 to 6.0, but the
expression level of Y99-63 is over five times more than Y98-16. Protein spots indicated by
arrow (6 to 9) are proteins which are specifically expressed in the strain Y99-63, with their
MW ranging from 10 to 20 kDa and pI from 5.0 to 6.0. MW is indicated on the right side in
KD. IEF is abbreviation for isoelectric focusing and SDS-PAGE is for SDS-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis.
128 Plant Pathology
Fig. 6. Comparison of the distribution of the proteins spots based on molecular weight.
8. Acknowledgment
This work was supported by the National Basic Research Program (No. 2011CB100400) from
The Ministry of Science and Technology of China and the National Natural Science Funds,
China (30860161), respectively.
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6
1. Introduction
Crop yield loss as a result of disease has an economic impact on many people. To protect
against disease, plant pathologists have developed various fungicides and disease resistant
cultivars. In parallel, pathogens have evolved to escape from disease protection measures
through, for example, the emergence of fungicide resistant isolates and the breakdown of
disease resistant cultivars. To resolve these issues, we should develop various disease
protection strategies for different types of target sites. Therefore, we must improve our
understanding of the infection mechanism of pathogens. Pathogens possess several classes
of genes that are essential for causing disease, i.e., pathogenicity genes or virulence genes,
the products of which are called pathogenicity factors. Phytopathogenic fungi have
developed various pathogenic factors, e.g., adhesion molecules to the host cells, sensor
machineries against host plants, invasion machineries into the host cells, adaptation ability
on the host cells, and so on. These factors comprise potential targets for disease control.
Fungal adhesion to host cells is an initial important step to establish infection, which is
considered to be a universal mechanism across plant pathogenic fungi. In this chapter, we
provide a review of the components required for fungal adhesion to the host cell, and
propose fungal adhesion as a potential target for disease control.
The plant surface is coated with a cuticle (wax) to prevent desiccation, particularly when the
environment is highly hydrophobic. When the spores of pathogens land on the plant
surface, the spores elongate into germ tubes and have elaborate infection machineries, such
as appressorium to infect plant cells. However, the spores must first settle on the plant
surface to accomplish infection. If the spores are not able to adhere to the plant surface, they
are easily dislodged by the wind or rain fall. Moreover, the spore germlings encounter the
counterforce of infection pressure from the plant surface. Therefore, firm adhesion enables
spore germlings to anchor tightly onto the host surface, and is important for the differentiation
of specialized infection structures. Adhesion is required for infection in most plant pathogens,
and this mechanism is also developing in phytopathogenic fungi. We showed that adhesion
ability was variable depending on the living strategies of different fungal species (Fig. 1). For
example, the saprotrophic fungus Neurospora crassa has weak adhesion ability on plastic
surface. In contrast, phytopathogenic fungi, such as Alternaria alternata Japanese pear
pathotype and Magnaporthe oryzae, adhered strongly to plastic surfaces. Since plastic surfaces
are highly hydrophobic, they mimic the plant surface. Hence, phytopathogenic fungi might
have evolved to settle on the surfaces of plants. However, the precise molecular mechanism of
fungal adhesion on plant surfaces remains undetermined.
Fig. 1. Variation in the ability of fungal adhesion to plastic surfaces. The saprotrophic fungus
Neurospora crassa has a weak adhesion ability. The phytopathogenic fungi, Alternaria
alternata Japanese pear pathotype and Magnaporthe oryzae, have high adhesion ability.
Adhesion ability was determined by total number of germlings was first counted under the
microscope and then washed by dipping in distilled water 100 times vertically to remove
the detached germlings.
spores, and disperses to distant areas. Successful infection by this fungus requires the
following steps: (1) the spore to land on the host surface and elongate the germ tube from
the apical spore cell and (2) the tip of the germ tube to differentiate into the appressorium,
which is the infection machinery. Subsequently, the fungi penetrate into the host cuticle and
generate a penetration peg from the bottom of the appressorium (Howard et al., 1991).
Although the conidia itself has low adhesion ability, the hydrated conidia attains strong
adhesion ability within 30 minutes of incubation (Hamer et al., 1988). Ultrastructural
analysis has revealed that the spore tip mucilage (STM) is preserved at the apical spore and
released after hydration (Braun and Howard, 1994). The attached spores on the surface start
to germinate and secrete ECM. The secreted ECM supports the enhanced adhesion ability of
the fungi on the plant surface. It is not known whether the STM and the ECM are the same
component. During the infection process, some essential environmental signals have been
identified as appressorium (infection)-inducing factors, such as the hardness (Xiao et al.,
1994) and the hydrophobicity of the attachment surface (Jelitto et al., 1994; Lee & Dean,
1994), and the chemical components from the plant surface (Gilbert et al., 1996). In addition,
a number of up-regulating genes have also been characterized (Talbot, 2003). However, the
available information was not sufficient to identify the principal components and regulation
mechanisms of fungal adhesion in M. oryzae.
While the components of STM remain unclear, it was found that STM was reactive with
lectin concanabalin A (ConA; -D-glucose and -(1,3)-/-(1,6)-D-mannose binding),
suggesting that STM consists of mannose containing glycoprotein (Hamer et al., 1988). The
ECM was also ConA-positive (Xiao et al., 1994). The effect of three different specific sugar-
binding lectins, namely ConA, PSA (-D-glucose and -(1,6)-D-mannose binding), and
WGA (chitin binding), on appressorium formation and the adhesion ability of the M. oryzae
germlings was evaluated (Fig. 3). High concentrations (50 g ml-1) of lectins, ConA, and
WGA were found to inhibit appressorium formation and adhesion. These results indicate
that these lectin treatments covered the cell wall surface, and inhibited the development of
the cell wall architecture (data not shown). In contrast, low concentrations (10 g ml-1) of
these lectins only affected adhesion, suggesting that low concentrations of lectins are
preferentially bound to the adhesion components (Fig. 3). Moreover, although PSA was
observed to bind to the cell wall surface, it did not affect the adhesion. ConA and PSA
commonly bind to the -D-glucose and the -(1,6)-D-mannose moieties; however, only
ConA binds to -(1,3)-D-mannose, suggesting that -(1,3)-D-mannose is a potential
adhesion component (Fig. 3). Our unpublished study revealed that the incubation of M.
oryzae spores in modified nutrient conditions produced less adherent spore germlings.
Furthermore, the less adherent spore germlings were ConA-negative (K. Inoue, unpublished
data), suggesting that mannose sugar may be important for adhesion.
Protein secretion via the Golgi pathway might be responsible for ECM production. In the
treatment with cycloheximide at the early step of germination, the germ tube and the
appressorium were not formed, and the germlings were easily removed (Fig. 4). In the
treatments with monensin and tunicamycin, the adhesion rate was significantly lower than
for the water control (Fig. 4). Hence, N-glycosylation of the mannose sugar moiety might be
important for the maturation of the adhesive protein(s). This result also agreed with the
conclusion of the lectin treatment experiments.
136 Plant Pathology
Fig. 4. The effects of inhibitors on appressorium formation and the adhesion of M. oryzae
germlings on the hydrophobic surface. The rate of appressorium formation (upper) and
adhesion (lower) of M. oryzae on the hydrophobic surface by inhibitor treatments with the
water control (a), 50 g ml-1 colchicine (b), 0.1 g ml-1 cycloheximide (c), 1 g ml-1 monensin
(d), and 10 g ml-1 tunicamycin (e) at 0 hpi (white bars), 1 hpi (grey bars), and 6 hpi (black
bars). Bars indicate standard deviation. *, indicates a significant difference from the control
(p < 0.05).
One of the candidate ECM components in M. oryzae, Emp1, was isolated from the cDNA
library, and was homologous to the extracellular matrix protein Fem1 in Fusarium oxysporum
(Ahn et al., 2004). The emp1 disruption mutants showed a slight reduction in adhesion
ability, but were largely involved in appressorium formation, suggesting that EMP1 was
involved in surface recognition (Ahn et al., 2004).
The Role of the Extracellular Matrix (ECM)
in Phytopathogenic Fungi: A Potential Target for Disease Control 137
Ultrastrucutural analysis was used to elucidate the ECM components, and revealed that the
ECM was an electron dense and fibrous structure (Fig. 5; K. Inoue et al., 2007). This fibrous
structure was supposed to be similar to the components of the cell adhesion factors
(extracellular matrix in animal cells), such as collagen, fibronectin, and laminin. We then
performed immunohistochemical analysis, using specific antibodies against mammal cell
adhesion factors. Positive signals were detected from the treatments with antibodies against
collagen, vitronectin, fibronectin, laminin, and integrin (K. Inoue et al., 2007). Similar results
have been reported by other research groups (Bae et al., 2007; Dean et al., 1994), and for other
plant pathogenic fungi (Celerin et al., 1996; Corra et al., 1996; Gale et al., 1998; Hyon et al., 2009;
Jian et al., 2007; Kaminskyj and Heath, 1995; Manning et al., 2004; Sarma et al., 2005). Cell to cell
adhesion mediated by integrin was involved in Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) motifs (Giancotti &
Ruoslahti, 1999). The germlings treated with RGD peptide reduced adhesion ability and
appressorium formation (Bae et al., 2007). The suppression effect by the RGD treatment was
reversed by supplementing with cAMP, suggesting that RGD recognition may be involved in
the signaling cascade for appressorium formation (Bae et al., 2007). Based on this evidence, the
functions and the components of fungal ECM resemble animal ECM. However, a similar
nucleotide sequence to that of the animal ECM component was not detected from the fungal
genome sequences. This suggests that only the restricted tertiary protein structure had a
resemblance, with the amino acids sequences being highly diverged.
Melanin is also one of the cell surface components. The fungicide treatments,
chlobenthiazone and tricyclazole, that inhibit melanin synthesis, have been shown to reduce
germling adhesion (S. Inoue et al., 1987).
Fig. 5. Transmission electron microscopy images of M. oryzae appressoria on the leaf surface
of wheat. Note: fibrous components were observed at the interface between the plant and
fungal appressorium. Adapted from Inoue et al. (2007), with permission.
Fig. 6. The effect of surface characteristics on appressorium formation and the adhesion of
M. oryzae germlings. (a) The rates of appressorium formation of M. oryzae germlings on
hydrophobic (white bar) and hydrophilic (black bar) surfaces at 6 hpi. (b) The rates of
adhesion to hydrophobic (white bars) and hydrophilic (black bars) surfaces at 0, 0.5, 3, and 6
hpi. Bars indicate standard deviation.
Fungal hydrophobins are cell-surface hydrophobic proteins with four disulphide bonds that
are ubiquitous in filamentous fungi (Kershaw et al., 2005; Wsten, 2001). Hydrophobins exist
in multiple copies, and these proteins are divided into two groups based on their physical
properties (Wessels, 1994). Hydrophobins seem to form part of the ECM. Class I
hydrophobins form highly insoluble polymers, whereas class II hydrophobins form
polymers that are soluble in some organic solvents (Sunde et al., 2008). These hydrophobins
are differentially expressed during the growth stage, and seem to have different functions
(Nielsen et al., 2001; Segers et al., 1999; Wessels et al., 1991; Whiteford et al., 2004). In M.
oryzae, two hydrophobins are well characterized: class I Mpg1 (Talbot et al., 1993) and class II
Mhp1 (Kim et al., 2005).
In the mpg1 null mutant, appressorium formation was reduced, suggesting the involvement
of host-sensing (Beckerman and Ebbole, 1996; Talbot et al., 1993; Talbot et al., 1996). In a
previous study, adhesion in the mpg1 null mutant was not significantly affected in a
conventional wash experiment, but was affected in a boiling-SDS wash experiment (Talbot
et al., 1996). In contrast, an RNA silencing experiment of Mpg1 reduced adhesion (K. Ikeda,
unpublished data). The Mpg1 silencing mutants reduced ConA-positives (K. Ikeda,
unpublished data), suggesting that Mpg1 is a ConA-positive glycoprotein, or that Mpg1
recruits ConA-positive glycoproteins to the cell surface. The complex formations involved in
Mpg1 may strengthen adhesion and contribute to pathogenicity. The hydrophobin RolA in
Aspergillus oryzae was associated with cutinase and allowed the substrate to degrade on the
hydrophobic surface (Takahashi et al., 2005). One of the cutinase genes Cut2 in M. oryzae was
involved in appressorium formation, but not involved in adhesion (Skamnioti & Gurr,
2007). Other cutinase genes may also be involved in adhesion.
The Role of the Extracellular Matrix (ECM)
in Phytopathogenic Fungi: A Potential Target for Disease Control 139
1993). The adhesion ability of B. cinerea seems to be strengthened with the differentiation of
germlings. Germling attachment was resistant to removal by boiling or by treatment with
hydrolytic enzymes, periodic acid, or sulfuric acid, but was readily removed by a strong
base, sodium hydrate (Doss et al., 1995). The ECM components of germ tubes detected the
presence of enzymatic activities such as polygalacturonase, laccase, and cutinase (Doss,
1999). Moreover, the ECM of germlings contained melanin (Doss et al., 2003). These
components were similar to M. oryzae and are assumed to be involved in adhesion. The class
I hydrophobin BcHpb1 was also partially involved in adhesion, although the disruption
mutant of BcHpb1 retained pathogenicity (Izumitsu et al., 2010).
4.2 SEM analysis of enzyme effects on the adhesion of M. oryzae germlings to the
host leaf surface
To examine the effect of the enzymes on germling detachment to the leaf surface, each
enzyme was applied to M. oryzae germlings at the appropriate time, and incubated for up to
25 hpi. The specimens were then observed by using SEM. It was difficult to ascertain
142 Plant Pathology
whether the absence of spores was the result of the enzyme treatments or the lack of spores
at the onset of the experiment. M. grisea reportedly produces cutinases (Skamnioti & Gurr,
2007; Sweigard et al., 1992). Therefore, this pathogen can degrade the wax of plant surfaces.
The detached infection structure would be recognizable as vestiges of degraded wax on the
wheat surface. In the treatment with cellulase or protease, the infection structures tightly
adhered onto the surface (K. Inoue et al., 2011). In contrast, the treatment with crude
collagenase or gelatinase B (matrix metalloproteinases; MMPs) resulted in the detachment of
germlings, and vestiges of the presence of germlings were observed (K. Inoue et al., 2011).
The detachment effect caused by the treatment with crude collagenase was validated at 18
hpi. In contrast, the detachment effect was cancelled out at 24 hpi, at which time fungal
penetration into the host was established.
The SEM observation clearly shows the effects of the enzymes on the degradation of the
interface between host plant and germlings. We demonstrated that the reduction in
pathogenicity is attributable to the detachment of germlings based on treatment with
effective enzymes. In this study, MMPs were confirmed to be useful for protecting wheat
from M. oryzae.
Fig. 8. Screening method to isolate gelatinolytic bacteria from nature. Adapted from Shimoi
et al. (2010), with permission.
The effects of bacterial gelatinolytic activity on the germling adhesion of M. oryzae were
evaluated. Treatment with each of the five bacterial isolates significantly decreased the
percentage of germling adhesion (Fig. 9). In particular, the effects of Ac1 and Ch1 on
germling detachment were comparable to the effects of commercial collagenase placed
simultaneously on spore suspensions (Fig. 9). The detachment of germlings decreased when
bacterial cultures were added 6 h after the inoculation of the spore suspension. Germling
144 Plant Pathology
adhesion was restored when EDTA was added to the mixtures of bacteria and spore
suspension, except in the case of Ps1.
We evaluated the protective effects of the selected bacterial isolates on rice blast disease.
Spore suspensions of M. oryzae and each bacterial culture were inoculated onto rice leaves
(cv. Lijiangxintuanheigu; LTH). The treatment with all the bacterial isolates significantly
decreased disease indices compared to the control (Fig. 10, Shimoi et al., 2010).
Fig. 10. Disease symptoms of rice blast inoculated with M. oryzae and gelatinolytic bacteria.
Control: M. oryzae spore suspension alone. Adapted from Shimoi et al. (2010), with
permission.
The Role of the Extracellular Matrix (ECM)
in Phytopathogenic Fungi: A Potential Target for Disease Control 145
5. Conclusion
Germling adhesion is a general feature of plant pathogenic fungi, but its components are
complicated. This adhesion ability is considered to be a promising a target for protection
against disease. We found that glycoprotein degrading enzymes effectively detach
germlings, while gelatinolytic bacteria showed a protective effect against disease. If these
gelatinolytic bacteria can produce cell lytic enzymes, such as chitinase or glucanase,
efficiency against disease protection would increase synergistically. Our future goals are to
screen specific bacteria that produce multiple enzymes and provide a stable habitat in the
foliar environment.
6. Acknowledgments
This research was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research B (No. 18380033),
Grants-in-Aid for Young Scientists B (No. 19780036), and Grants-in Aid for Young Scientists
A (No. 23688006) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.
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150 Plant Pathology
Spain
1. Introduction
Plant pathogenic fungi are the causal agents of the most detrimental diseases in plants,
including economically important crops, provoking considerable yield losses worldwide.
Fungal pathogens can infect a wide range of plant species or be restricted to one or few host
species. Some of them are obligate parasites requiring the presence of the living host to grow
and reproduce, but most of them are saprophytic and can survive without the presence of
the living plant, in the soil, water or air. Isolates of a fungal species can be differentiated by
morphological characteristics, host range (formae speciales), pathogenic aggressiveness
(pathotypes or races) or their ability to form stable vegetative heterokaryons by fusion
between genetically different strains (belonging to the same vegetative compatibility group,
VCG).
Detection and accurate identification of plant pathogens is one of the most important
strategies for controlling plant diseases to initiate preventive or curative measures. Special
interest should be taken in the early detection of pathogens in seeds, mother plants and
propagative plant material to avoid the introduction and further spreading of new
pathogens in a growing area where it is not present yet. For that reason, the availability of
fast, sensitive and accurate methods for detection and identification of fungal pathogens is
increasingly necessary to improve disease control decision making. Traditionally, the most
prevalent techniques used to identify plant pathogens relied upon culture-based
morphological approaches. These methods, however, are often time-consuming, laborious,
and require extensive knowledge of classical taxonomy. Other limitations include the
difficulty of some species to be cultured in vitro, and the inability to accurately quantify the
pathogen (Goud & Termorshuizen, 2003). These limitations have led to the development of
molecular approaches with improved accuracy and reliability. A high variety of molecular
methods have been used to detect, identify and quantify a long list of plant pathogenic
fungi. Molecular methods have also been applied to the study of the genetic variability of
pathogen populations, and even for the description of new fungal species. In general, these
methods are much faster, more specific, more sensitive, and more accurate, and can be
performed and interpreted by personnel with no specialized taxonomical expertise.
Additionally, these techniques allow the detection and identification of non-culturable
152 Plant Pathology
microorganisms, and due to its high degree of specificity, molecular techniques can
distinguish closely related organisms at different taxonomic levels. Here, we review the
most important tools for molecular detection of plant pathogenic fungi, their applicability,
and their implementation in horticultural and agricultural practices.
On the other hand, once the pathogenic fungus is already established in a given crop
growing area, the use of synthetic fungicides constitutes the main strategy to control plant
diseases, since these compounds act quickly and effectively. The disadvantages of continued
use of fungicides are their limited spectrum and the emergence of resistant fungal isolates.
This fact leads to many yield losses as control systems are not longer effective. The
development of resistance to fungicides in fungal pathogens and the growing public
concern over the health and environmental hazards associated with the high level of
pesticide have resulted in a significant interest in knowing more about fungal resistance.
The emergence of more stringent regulations regarding pesticide residues means that one of
the main priorities is to ensure food security by reducing the use of fungi toxics. For this
reason, it is important to identify and characterize the mechanisms involved in the
emergence of strains resistant to fungicides used for control diseases and to know the
molecular methods currently available to detect them.
Schaad, 2003) or amplification of fungal RNA (RT-PCR) (Lee et al., 1989) may solve this
problem to same extent. Like this, many PCR variants have been developed to improve
sensitivity, specificity, rapidity and throughput, and to allow the quantification of the
fungal pathogen in the plant and the environment.
When analysing soil samples, the main focus for phytopathologists is the isolation of DNA
from different microorganisms and then, the specific detection and monitoring of the
fungus(i) of interest. Classical approach consists of cultivating the soil fungi in different
media and screen for the desired pathogen. However, many microorganisms from the soil
community can not be isolated by this procedure. An alternative method is to isolate DNA
directly from the soil sample without prior culturing. Protocols using enzymatic (e.g.
protease, chitinase, glucanase) or mechanical lysis (glass-beads beating, freeze-thawing,
vigorous shaking, microwave or grinding in liquid nitrogen) have been reported, but a
combination of both procedures seems to be the more effective (Anderson I. C. & Parkin,
2007, Jiang et al., 2011). In the same way, improved protocols for an efficient isolation of
DNA from water for detection and monitoring of plant pathogens have been reported
(Pereira et al., 2010).
During the homogenisation process, polysaccharides and phenolic compounds from plants or
humic and fulvic acids from soils can be released that can inhibit the Taq DNA polymerase
leading to the occurrence of false negatives (Munford et al., 2006; Tebbe & Vahjen, 1993;
Wilson, 1997). This problem may be partially overcome by the use in the extraction buffer of
some compounds such as polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) or cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide
(CTAB) for plant extracts, and bovine sero albumine (BSA) for soil samples (Anderson I.C. &
Cairney, 2004), or by removing inhibitors by the use of spin/vacuum columns. Some PCR
variants such as Magnetic Capture-Hybridisation PCR have been developed to remove the
presence of PCR inhibitors in plant extracts (see below). In addition, it is increasingly common
to use an internal positive control of the PCR reaction either by the amplification of a
conserved plant gene (e.g. cytochrome oxidase I, cox I) in multiplex (Bilodeau, et al., 2009) or in
a parallel assay (Garrido et al., 2009), or by the addition of an exogenous DNA and their
corresponding primers to each reaction (Cruz-Prez et al., 2001).
to avoid the nucleic acids isolation step. One of them uses few microliters of crude extract
loaded and immobilized on small pieces of paper, e.g FTA cards. A subsequent lysis of the
cells in appropriate buffer allows the release of nucleic acids that are fixed in the membrane
and protected from degradation. DNA can be stored on dry cards for several years in a dry
place at room temperature without decreasing the sensitivity of detection (Smith & Burgoyne,
2004). Moreover, membrane immobilised-DNA is suitable of transportation or mail to other
laboratories. Suzuki et al. (2006) reported that nucleic acids recovered from FTA cards could be
used for the detection of Aspergillus oryzae, releasing the DNA from the fungal tissue by
treatment in a microwave oven before application to the membranes. Grund et al. (2010) used
FTA cards coupled to PCR for the detection of plant pathogens including oomycetes such as
Phytophthora and filamentous fungi such as Fusarium.
Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici (Zhao et al., 2007), and distinguishing between weakly and
high virulent isolates of Leptosphaeria maculans (Xue et al., 1992), or difining anastomosis
subgroups of Rhizoctonia solani (Budge, 2009; Godoy-Lutz et al., 2008).
The ITS region remains an important locus for molecular identification of fungi. However, as
more sequence data is collected from a wider range of fungal isolates, the utility of alternative
loci for accurate species identification is increasing. The intergenic spacer sequence (IGS)
placed between the 28S and 18S rRNA genes is the region with the greatest amount of
sequence variation in rDNA. It is frequently used in PCR-based methods when there are not
enough differences available across the ITS. Primers in this region have been designed to
detect and identify Verticillium dahliae and V. alboatrum (Schena et al., 2004) and to distinguish
pathogenic and non-pathogenic Fusarium oxysporum in tomato (Validov et al., 2011). As
another example, Inami et al. (2010) differentiated Fusarium oxysporum f. sp lycopersici, and its
races using primers and TaqMan-MGB probes based on IGS and avirulent SIX genes.
Other housekeeping genes with higher variability are being more extensively used to
develop diagnostics for fungi, including nuclear genes such as -tubulin (Aroca et al., 2008;
Fraaije et al., 2001; Mostert et al., 2006), translation elongation factor 1 alpha (TEF 1 (Geiser
et al., 2004; Knutsen et al., 2004, Kristensen et al., 2005), calmodulin (Mul et al., 2004),
avirulence genes (Lievens et al., 2009), and mitochondrial genes such as the multicopy cox I
and cox II and their intergenic region (Martin & Tooley, 2003; Nguyen & Seifert, 2008; Seifert
et al., 2007). Mating type genes also show high diversity and fast evolutionary rate and
could be used for inter- and intra-species differentiation, e.g. Foster et al. (2002)
distinguished between the two mating types of Pyrenopeziza brassicae. Moreover, Martnez-
Espinoza et al. (2003) used mating type genes to specifically detect Ustilago maydis in maize
cultivars. To enhance the specificity of a diagnostic assay, a combination of multiple
diagnostic regions is recommended. Many authors have followed this multi-locus diagnostic
strategy, e.g. Collado-Romero et al. (2008) studied the evolutionary relationships among
Verticillium dahliae vegetative compatibility groups by AFLP fingerprints and sequence
analysis of actin, -tubulin, calmodulin, and histone 3 genes, the ITS region, and a V. dahliae-
specific sequence; Dixon et al. (2009) demonstrated the host specialisation and phylogenetic
diversity of Corynespora cassiicola using the ITS region, actine gene and two random
hypervariable loci; Glienke et al. (2011) performed sequence analysis of the ITS region and
partial TEF 1, actin and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) genes to
study the genetic diversity of Phyllosticta spp. allowing differentiation of pathogenic and
non pathogenic species and describing two new Phyllosticta species; Inderbitzin et al. (2010)
verified a high species diversity in Botryosphaeriaceae species performing phylogenetic
analyses based on six loci, including the ITS region and TEF 1, GPDH, a heat shock protein,
histone-3 and tubulin genes; Shimomoto et al. (2011) used RAPDs and sequences from -
tubulin, TEF 1 calmodulin and actin genes to detect pathogenic and genetic variation
among isolates of Corynespora cassiicola.
mitochondrial cox I gene, a SNP method has been developed to detect and differentiate
isolates of Phytophthora ramorum from Europe and those originating in the United States
(Kroon et al., 2004). In other experiment, polymorphisms detected in the microsatellite
flanking regions of Phytophthora infestans allowed the development of a SNP genetic marker
system for typing this pathogen (Abbott et al., 2010). Many of the examples described below
take advantage of SNPs for designing highly specific detection assays.
sensitivity, specificity and throughput and allowing the quantification of fungi in infected
plants or environment.
2.1.6.2 Nested-PCR and Cooperational-PCR (Co-PCR)
Nested PCR approach is used when an improvement of the sensitivity and/or specificity of
detection is necessary. This method consists in two consecutive rounds of amplification in
which two external primers amplify a large amplicon that is then used as a target for a
second round of amplification using two internal primers (Porter-Jordan et al., 1990). The
two reactions are usually performed in separated tubes involving time and effort and
increasing the risks of false positives due to cross contamination. However, some
improvements in the relative concentrations of the external and internal primers have
permitted to perform the two reactions in a single closed tube supporting high throughput.
This method has been widely used for detection and/or further characterisation of
numerous fungi (Aroca & Raposo, 2007; Grote et al., 2002; Hong et al., 2010; Ippolito et al.,
2002; Langrell et al., 2008; Meng and Wang 2010; Mercado-Blanco et al., 2001; Qin et al.,
2011; Wu et al., 2011).
An alternative PCR method that enhances sensitivity and minimise contamination risks is
the Co-operational PCR. In Co-PCR a single reaction containing the four primers, one pair
internal to other, enhances the production of the longest fragment by the co-operational
action of all amplicons (Olmos et al., 2002). Co-PCR is usually coupled with dot blot
hybridisation by using a specific probe to enhance the specificity of the detection and
provide a sensitivity level similar to nested PCR method. Martos et al. (2011) used this
method for sensitive and specific detection of grapevine fungi. In both nested- and Co-PCR
methods, the use of external primers can be used for generic amplification and the internal
primers for further and more specific characterisation of the amplified product at species or
strain level.
2.1.6.3 Multiplex PCR
Multiplex PCR is based on the use of several PCR primers in the same reaction allowing the
simultaneous and sensitive detection of different DNA targets, reducing time and cost. This
method is useful in plant pathology since plants are usually infected by more than one
pathogen. Different fragments specific to the target fungi were simultaneously amplified
and identified on the basis of their molecular sizes on agarose gels. Although the efficiency
of amplification is strongly influenced by amplicon size (shorter amplicons may be
amplified preferentially over longer ones), an accurate and careful design of primers and the
optimisation of their relative concentrations are required to overcome this drawback and get
an equilibrate detection of all target fungi. Multiplex PCR technique has been used for the
simultaneous detection and differentiation of Podosphaera xanthii and Golovinomyces
cichoracearum in sunflower (Chen et al., 2008); for detecting Phytophthora lateralis in cedar
trees and water samples, including detection of an internal control in the same reaction
(Winton & Hansen, 2001); for determining the mating type of the pathogens Tapesia
yallundae and T. acuformis (Dyer et al., 2001); for differentiating two pathotypes of Verticilliun
albo-atrum infecting hop (Radiek et al., 2004) and for distinguishing among eleven taxons of
wood decay fungi infecting hardwood trees (Guglielmo et al., 2007). Due to the complexity
of the design this technique has recently been replaced by other multiplexing techniques
including multiplex real-time PCR (see below).
Molecular Tools for Detection of Plant Pathogenic Fungi and Fungicide Resistance 159
PCR-based method. RT-PCR has been used to detect viable populations of Mycosphaerella
graminicola in wheat (Guo et al., 2005). A RT-nested-PCR method was applied for detection
of Oidium neolycopersici in tomato (Matsuda et al., 2005). Even so, the most frequent
application of this technique in phytopathology is the analysis of plant and fungal gene
expression during disease development (Yang et al., 2010).
2.1.6.7 in situ PCR
This technique allows the amplification of specific gene sequences within intact cells or tissues
combining two technologies: PCR and in situ hybridisation (ISH) (Long, 1993; Nuovo, 1992).
The improved sensitivity of this technique allows the localization of one target copy per cell
(Haase et al., 1990; Nuovo et al., 1991). However, background detection is usually high because
nonspecific DNA synthesis during in situ PCR on tissue sections may occur (Nuovo et al.,
1994). In addition, it is a time-consuming technique due to the need for a hybridisation step
and technically demanding procedures such as light microscopy. Bindsley et al. (2002) used in
situ PCR technique to identify Blumeria graminis spores and mycelia on barley leaves.
2.1.6.8 PCR-DGGE
This method is mainly applied for the analysis of the genetic diversity of microbial
communities without the need of any prior knowledge of the species (Muyzer, 1999;
Gothwal et al., 2007; Portillo et al., 2011). DGGE (Denaturing Gradient Gel Electrophoresis)
and its variant TGGE (Temperature Gradient Gel Electrophoresis) use chemical gradient
such as urea (DGGE) or temperature (TGGE) to denature and separate DNA samples when
they are moving across an acrylamide gel. In PCR-DGGE target DNA from plant or
environmental samples are firstly amplified by PCR and then subjected to denaturing
electrophoresis. Sequence variants of particular fragments migrate at different positions in
the denaturing gradient gel, allowing a very sensitive detection of polymorphisms in DNA
sequences. In addition, PCR-DGGE primers contain a GC rich tail in their 5 end to improve
the detection of small variations (Myers et al., 1985). The bands obtained in the gel can be
extracted, cloned or reamplified and sequenced for identification, being even possible to
identify constituents that represent only 1% of the total microbial community. These
techniques are very suitable for the identification of novel or unknown organisms and the
most abundant species can be readily detected.
This method is however time-consuming, poorly reproducible and provides relative
information about the abundance of detected species. Interpretation of the results may be
difficult since the microheterogeneity present in some target genes may appear as multiple
bands in the gel for a single species, leading to an overestimation of the community
diversity. Furthermore, fragments with different sequences but similar melting behaviour
are not always correctly separated. In other cases, the analysis of complex communities of
microorganisms may result in blurred gels due to the large number of bands obtained.
A PCR-DGGE detection tool based in the amplification of the ITS region has been recently
applied to detect multiple species of Phytophthora from plant material and environmental
samples (Rytknen et al., 2011). Other authors have used this technique to compare the
structure of fungal communities growing in different conditions or environments, e.g. to study
the impact of culture management such as biofumigation, chemifumigation or fertilisation on
the relative abundance of soil fungal species (Omirou et al., 2011; Wakelin et al., 2008).
Molecular Tools for Detection of Plant Pathogenic Fungi and Fungicide Resistance 161
Real-time
Pathogen Reference Host plant
chemistry
Biscogniauxia mediterranea TaqMan Luchi et al., 2005 Oak
Botrytis squamosa TaqMan Carisse et al., 2009 Onion
Chalara fraxinea TaqMan Ioos et al., 2009 Ash trees
Colletotrichum acutatum TaqMan Garrido et al., 2009 Strawberry
Colletotrichum gloesporioides TaqMan Garrido et al., 2009 Strawberry
Colletotrichum spp. TaqMan Garrido et al., 2009 Strawberry
Discula destructiva TaqMan Zhang, N. et al., 2011 Dogwood
Fusarium avenaceum TaqMan MGB Kulik et al., 2011 Cereals
Molecular
Fusarium equiseti Maca-Vicente et al., 2009 Barley
Beacons
Fusarium foetens TaqMan De Weerdt et al., 2006 Begonia
Wheat
Fusarium graminearum TaqMan Demeke et al., 2010
Barley
Fusarium oxysporum f. sp.
TaqMan MGB Inami et al., 2010 Tomato
lycopersici and its races
Fusarium poae TaqMan MGB Kulik et al., 2011 Cereals
Fusarium tricinctum TaqMan MGB Kulik et al., 2011 Cereals
Fuscoporia torulosa Scorpions Campanile et al., 2008 Oak
Gremmeniella abietina TaqMan Brja et al., 2006 Spruce
van Gent-Pelzer et al.,
Guignardia citricarpa TaqMan Citrus fruit
2007
Chickpea
Macrophomina phaseolina TaqMan MGB Babu et al., 2011 Soybean
Pigeon pea
Mycosphaerella graminicola TaqMan MGB Bearchell et al., 2005 Wheat
Taqman Grapevine
Phaeoacremonium aleophilum Aroca et al., 2008
multiplex wood
Taqman Grapevine
Phaeoacremonium mortoniae Aroca et al., 2008
multiplex wood
Taqman Grapevine
Phaeoacremonium parasiticum Aroca et al., 2008
multiplex wood
Taqman Grapevine
Phaeoacremonium viticola Aroca et al., 2008
multiplex wood
Phaeospora nodorum TaqMan MGB Bearchell et al., 2005 Wheat
Soybean
Phialophora gregata TaqMan Malvick & Impullitti, 2007
Soil
Phoma tracheiphila TaqMan Demontis et al., 2008 Citrus
Phoma tracheiphila TaqMan Licciardello et al., 2006 Citrus
Phomopsis sp. TaqMan Brja et al., 2006 Spruce
TaqMan
Phytophthora citricola Schena et al., 2006 Forest trees
multiplex
Phytophthora erythroseptica TaqMan Nanayakkara et al., 2009 Potato
TaqMan
Phytophthora kernoviae Schena et al., 2006 Forest trees
multiplex
Molecular Tools for Detection of Plant Pathogenic Fungi and Fungicide Resistance 165
Real-time
Pathogen Reference Host plant
chemistry
Rododendron
TaqMan
Phytophthora pseudosyringae Tooley et al., 2006 and other host
multiplex
species
TaqMan
Phytophthora quercina Schena et al., 2006 Forest trees
multiplex
TaqMan
Bilodeau et al., 2009 Oak
multiplex
TaqMan Hughes et al., 2006 Parrotia persica
TaqMan
Schena et al., 2006 Forest trees
multiplex
Phytophthora ramorum Scorpion and
Molecular Tomlinson et al., 2007
Beacon
Rododendron
TaqMan
Tooley et al., 2006 and other host
multiplex
species
TaqMan Tomlinson et al., 2005 Rhododendron
Phytophthora spp. TaqMan
Bilodeau et al., 2009 Oak
multiplex
Plasmopara viticola TaqMan Valsesia et al., 2005 Grapevine
Molecular
Pochonia chlamydosporia Maca-Vicente et al., 2009 Barley
Beacon
Puccinia coronata TaqMan Jackson et al., 2006 Oat
Cereals
Puccinia graminis TaqMan Barnes & Szabo, 2007
Grasses
Cereals
Puccinia recondita TaqMan Barnes & Szabo, 2007
Grasses
Cereal
Puccinia striiformis TaqMan Barnes & Szabo, 2007
Grasses
Cereals
Puccinia triticina TaqMan Barnes & Szabo, 2007
Grasses
Pyrenophora teres TaqMan MGB Leisova et al., 2006 Barley
Pyrenophora teres f. maculata TaqMan MGB Leisova et al., 2006 Barley
Pyrenophora teres f. teres TaqMan MGB Leisova et al., 2006 Barley
Pythium vexans TaqMan Tewoldemedhin et al., 2011 Apple
Rhynchosporium secalis TaqMan, LNA Fountaine et al., 2007 Barley
Rosellinia necatrix Scorpion Ruano-Rosa et al., 2007 Avocado
Tobacco
Thielaviopsis basicola TaqMan Huang & Kang, 2010
Soil
Rice
Ustilaginoidea virens TaqMan Ashizawa et al., 2010
Soil
Table 2. Examples of real-time PCR based on specific fluorescent labelled probes or primers
for detection of plant pathogenic fungi (last 6 years).
166 Plant Pathology
and the quencher are in close proximity and fluorescence is quenched. When the probe
hibridises to the target sequence the complementary arms separate, thus allowing the
emission of fluorescence and hence making possible the detection and quantification of the
target sequence. Because the stem/loop structure is very thermostable molecular beacons
must have a high specificity to hybridise to a target. This makes the chemistry appropriate
for the detection of single nucleotide differences in mutation and SNP analyses. Molecular
beacons have allowed real-time specific quantification of Fusarium equiseti and Pochonia
chlamydosporia (a nematode parasitic fungus) in barley roots (Maca-Vicente et al., 2009).
Scorpions are bifunctional molecules in which an upstream hairpin probe is covalently
linked to a downstream primer sequence (Whitcombe et al., 1999). The hairpin probe
contains a fluorophore at the 5 end and a quencher at the 3 end. The loop portion of the
scorpion probe is complementary to the target sequence. During the amplification
reaction the probe becomes attached to the target region synthesized in the first PCR
cycle. Following the second cycle of denaturation and annealing, the probe and the target
hybridise resulting in separation of the fluorophore from the quencher and an increase in
the fluorescence emitted. Improvement of Scorpions sensitivity has been achieved by
placing the quencher in a separate oligonucleotide (Scorpions bi-probes) allowing greater
separation of fluorophore and quencher and giving stronger signals. As with all dye-
probe based methods, Scorpion probes follow strict design considerations for secondary
structure and primer sequence to ensure that a secondary reaction will not compete with
the correct probing event. Scorpion technology has been used for the detection of
Rosellinia necatrix in roots of different plant host species and soils (Ruano-Rosa et al., 2007;
Schena & Ippolito, 2003), and for the detection of Fuscoporia torulosa in holm oaks
(Campanile et al., 2008).
c. Specific fluorescent labelled primers
Unlike other real-time chemistries, in which the incorporation of the fluorescent dye
increases with the increasing number of copies of the DNA target, Plexor system measures
the decrease of the fluorescence over time by the quenching of the dye. One of the two
primers is labelled with a fluorescent dye and modified with methylisocytosine (isodC)
residue at the 5 end, whereas the other primer is not. The dabcyl-iso dGTP (iso-dG) present
in the real-time PCR reaction cocktail is incorporated at the position complementary to the
iso-dC label acting as a quencher and reducing the fluorescence over time. A quantitative
real-time using Plexor primers has been developed for the detection and quantification of
Verticillium dahliae in potato (Atallah et al., 2007).
2.3 Fingerprinting
Fingerprinting approaches allow the screening of random regions of the fungal genome for
identifying species-specific sequences when conserved genes have not enough variation to
successfully identify species (McCartney et al., 2003). Fingerprinting analyses are generally
used to study the phylogenetic structure of fungal populations. However, these techniques
have been also useful for identifying specific sequences used for the detection of fungi at
very low taxonomic level, and even for differentiate strains of the same species with
different host range, virulence, compatibility group or mating type.
that may distinguish fungal species varieties or strains (Welsh & McClelland, 1990; Williams
et al., 1990). Some of the specific DNA fragments detected in a profile may be cut out of the
gel and sequenced to obtain a SCAR (Sequence-characterized amplified region), into which
specific primers can be designed for a more precise PCR detection. SCAR primers have been
used for instance to specifically identify Phytophthora cactorum (Causin et al., 2005), Fusarium
subglutinans (Zaccaro et al., 2007) and Guignardia citricarpa (Stringari et al., 2009) in infected
plant material; to distinguish among several formae speciales of Fusarium oxysporum (Lievens
et al., 2008); to differentiate the bioherbicidal strain of Sclerotinia minor from like organisms
(Pan et al., 2010); and to establish two different groups in Gaeumannomyces graminis var.
tritici (Daval et al., 2010).
RAPD results are also useful for the analysis of the genetic diversity among populations.
Fingerprints are scored for the presence (1) or absence (0) of bands of various molecular
weight sizes in the form of binary matrices. Data are analyzed to obtain statistic coefficients
among the isolates that are then clustered to generate dendrograms. RAPDs have been used
to analyze the genetic diversity among different species and races of Fusarium spp. (Lievens
et al., 2007; Arici & Koc 2010) and different pathotypes of Elsino spp. (Hyun et al., 2009).
This technique has also been applied to differentiate fungi isolates according to their host
plant (Midorikawa et al., 2008), enzyme production profiles (Saldanha et al., 2007) or
geographical origin and chemotypes (Zheng et al., 2009).
The RAPD technique is rapid, inexpensive and does not require any prior knowledge of the
DNA sequence of the target organism. Results obtained from RAPD profiles are easy to
interpret because they are based on amplification or non amplification of specific DNA
sequences. In addition, RAPD analyses can be carried out on large numbers of isolates
without the need for abundant quantities of high-quality DNA (Nayaka et al., 2011).
Disadvantages of this technique include poor reproducibility between laboratories, and the
inability to differentiate non-homologous co-migrating bands. In addition, RAPDs are
dominant markers so, they cannot measure the genetic diversity affected by the number of
alleles at a locus, nor differentiate homozygotes and heterozygotes individuals. This is not
an issue with haploid fungi, but it can be a problem with many basidiomycetes and
oomycetes that are heterokaryons, diploids or polyploids (Fourie et al., 2011).
Depending on the primers used and on the reaction conditions, random amplification of
fungal genomes produces genetic polymorphisms specific at the genus, species or strain
levels (Liu et al., 2009). As a result, AFLP has been used to differentiate fungal isolates at
several taxonomic levels e.g. to distinguish Cladosporium fulvurn from Pyrenopeziuz brassicae
species (Majer et al., 1996), Aspergillus carbonarius from A. ochraceus (Schmidt et al., 2004),
and Colletotrichum gossypii from C. gossypii var. cephalosporioides (Silva et al., 2005); also to
differentiate Monilinia laxa that infect apple trees from isolates infecting other host plants
(Gril et al., 2008); and to separate non-pathogenic strains of Fusarium oxysporum from those
of F. commune (Stewart et al., 2006). AFLP markers have also been used to construct genetic
linkage maps e.g. of Phytophthora infestans (Van der Lee et al., 1997). Specific AFLP bands
may also be used for SCAR markers development used in PCR-based diagnostic tests. Using
SCAR markers Cipriani et al. (2009) could distinguish isolates of Fusarium oxysporum that
specifically infect the weed Orobanche ramose. AFLP profiles have also been widely used for
the phylogenetic analysis of Fusarium oxysporum complex (Baayen et al., 2000; Fourie et al.,
2011; Groenewald et al., 2006).
2.3.4 Microsatellites
Microsatellites, also known as simple sequence repeats (SSRs) or short tandem repeats
(STRs), are motifs of one to six nucleotides repeated several times in all eukaryotic genomes
(generally in non-coding regions). These nucleotide units can differ in repeat number among
individuals and their distribution in the genome is almost random. Using primers flanking
such variable regions PCR products of different lengths can be obtained. So, the
microsatellites are highly versatile genetic markers that have been widely exploited for
DNA fingerprinting. The advantages of SSRs are that they are multiallelic, codominant,
highly polymorphic and several thousand potentially polymorphic markers are available.
Moreover, it is possible the analysis of samples with limited DNA amounts or degraded
DNA with high reproducibility. The microsatellites have a high mutation rate and are able
to gain and lose repeat units by DNA-replication slippage, a mutation mechanism that is
specific to tandemly repeated sequences (Schletterer, 2000). This characteristic can create
difficulties for populations-genetic analyses. Other drawbacks of the SSRs include the
requirement of a prior knowledge of the DNA sequences of the flanking regions and their
cost and low throughput because of difficulties for automation and data management.
Moreover, a high number of microsatellite loci are necessary for a reliable phylogenetic
reconstruction. However, the next-generation sequencing technologies and multiplexing
microsatellites solve, in part, these problems.
Microsatellites have been used for the study of the genetic diversity of plant pathogenic fungi
within species e.g. Ascochyta rabiei (Bayraktar et al., 2007), Ceratocystis fimbriata (Rizatto et al.,
2010), Macrophomina phaseolina (Jana et al., 2005), Puccinia graminis and P. triticina (Szabo, 2007;
Szabo & Kolmer, 2007), Sclerotinia subarctica and S. sclerotiorum (Winton et al., 2007); and for
genetic map construction, e.g. Zheng et al. (2008) constructed a genetic map of Magnaporthe
grisea consisting of 176 SSR markers. In other experiment, microsatellite markers specific for
Phytophthora ramorum were employed to distinguish between A1 and A2 mating types isolates
of this pathogen from two different geographic origins (Prospero et al., 2004).
To reduce the cost of developing microsatellites a novel technique has emerged based on
sequence tagged microsatellites (STMs). Each STM is amplified by PCR using a single
170 Plant Pathology
primer specific to the conserved DNA sequence flanking the microsatellite repeat in
combination with a universal primer that anchors to the 5-ends of the microsatellites
(Hayden et al., 2002). STMs have been developed for the plant pathogens Rhynchosporium
secalis (Keipfer et al., 2006) and Pyrenophora teres (Keipfer et al., 2007).
confirmed by real-time PCR analysis (Lievens et al., 2005b), the monitoring of Phytophthora
species diversity in soil and water samples (Chimento et al., 2005), and the identification and
differentiation of toxin producing and non-producing Fusarium species in cereal grains
(Nicolaisen et al., 2005). Using a cox I high density oligonucleotide microarray Chen et al.
(2009) could identify Penicillium species. Moreover, Lievens et al. (2007) could detect and
differentiate F. oxysporum f. sp. cucumerinum and F. oxysporum f. sp. radicis-cucumerinum
pathogens by a DNA array containing genus-, species- and forma specialis-specific
oligonucleotides.
Additionally, A DNA array for simultaneous detection of over 40 different plant pathogenic
soilborne fungi and 10 bacteria that frequently occur in greenhouse crops has been
developed. This array, called DNA Multiscan (http://www.dnamultiscan.com/), is
routinely used worldwide by companies that offer disease diagnostic services and advice to
commercial growers.
2.5 Sequencing
As discussed above, morphological characteristics are not always enough to identify a
pathogen. One of the most direct approaches to do that consists in the PCR amplification of a
target gene with universal primers, followed by sequencing and comparison with the available
publicly databases. In addition, new fungal species have been described by using sequencing
approaches. However, the use of sequence databases to identify organisms based on DNA
similarity may have some pitfalls including erroneous and incomplete sequences, sequences
associated with misidentified organisms, the inability to easily change or update data, and
problems associated with defining species boundaries, all of them leading to erroneous
interpretation of search results. An effort for generating and archiving high quality data by the
researchers community should be the remedy of this drawback (Kang et al., 2010). Other
limitation of sequencing as diagnostic tool is the need to sequence more than one locus for the
robustness of the result, and the impractical of this method in cases when rapid results are
needed such as for the control or eradication of serious plant disease outbreaks. Nevertheless,
the increase of sequencing capacity and the decrease of costs have allowed the accumulation of
a high numbers of fungal sequences in publicly accessible sequence databases, and sequences
of selected genes have been widely used for the identification of specific pathogens and the
development of sequence-based diagnostic methods.
chemiluminescence and a fifth protein, SSB, which can be included to enhance the quality of
the obtained sequences and thereby prolong the read length. The detection system is based
on the pyrophosphate released when a nucleotide is introduced in the DNA strand.
Thereby, the signal can be quantitatively connected to the number of bases added
(Ahmadian et al., 2006). The pyrosequencing principle is used by the 454 platform, the first
next-generation sequencing technology released to the market by Roche Applied Science.
454 technology is based in emulsion PCR (Tawfik et al., 1998), which uses fixing adapter-
ligated-DNA fragments to streptavidin beads in water-in-oil emulsion droplets. In each
droplet the DNA fixed to these beads is then amplified by PCR producing about 107 copies
of a unique DNA template per bead. Each DNA-bound bead is placed into a ~29 m well on
a PicoTiterPlate, a fiber optic chip, and analyzed using a pyrosequencing reaction. The use
of the picotiter plate allows hundreds of thousands of pyrosequencing reactions to be
carried out in parallel, massively increasing the sequencing throughput. 454 platform is
capable of generating 80120 Mb of sequence in 200 to 300 bp reads in a 4 h run. This
technology enables a rapid and accurate quantification of sequence variation, including
mutation detection, SNP genotyping, estimation of allele frequency and gene copy number,
allelic imbalance and methylation status. Pyrosequencing can be applied to any DNA
source, including degraded or low-quality DNA. Disadvantages are short read lengths,
which may be problematic for sequence assembly particularly in areas associated with
sequence repeats, the need for expensive biotinylated primers, and the inability to accu-
rately detect variants within long (~ 5 or 6 bp) homopolymer stretches. In addition,
multiplexing, while possible, is difficult to design.
The pyrosequencing technology has not been widely applied for the control of fungal plant
diseases yet. However, Nunes et al. (2011) applied 454 sequencing technology to elucidate
and characterize the small RNA transcriptome (15 - 40 nt) of mycelia and appressoria of
Magnaporthe oryzae. Thus, they propose that a better understanding of key small RNA
players in M. oryzae pathogenesis-related processes may illuminate alternative strategies to
engineer plants capable of modifying the M. oryzae small transcriptome, and suppress
disease development in an effective manner. Another application of this new sequencing
technology is the rapid generation of genomic information to identify putative single-
nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to be used for population genetic, evolutionary, and
phylogeographic studies on non-model organisms. Thus, Broders et al. (2011) described the
sequencing, assembly and discovery of SNPs from the plant fungal pathogen Ophiognomonia
clavigignenti-juglandacearum, for which virtually no sequence information was previously
available. Moreover, Malausa et al. (2011) described a high-throughput method for isolating
microsatellite markers based on coupling multiplex microsatellite enrichment and 454
pyrosequencing in different organisms, such as Phytophthora alni subsp. uniformis.
The principle of the Illumina/Solexa system is also based on sequencing-by-synthesis
chemistry, with novel reversible terminator nucleotides for the four bases each labeled with
a different fluorescent dye, and a special DNA polymerase enzyme able to incorporate them
(Ansorge, 2010). In the ABI SOLiD (Sequencing by Oligo Ligation and Detection), the
sequence extension reaction is not carried out by polymerases but rather by ligases. In the
sequencing-by-ligation process, a sequencing primer is hybridized to single-stranded copies
of the library molecules to be sequenced. (Kircher & Kelso, 2010). These two above
mentioned systems have not been currently used in studies on plant pathogenic fungi.
Molecular Tools for Detection of Plant Pathogenic Fungi and Fungicide Resistance 173
3. Fungicide resistance
Despite extensive fungicide use in the previous 90 years, resistance emerged as a practical
problem as recently as 1970. The incidence of resistance has been restricted largely to
systemic fungicides that operate to biochemical targets (single-site inhibitors). These
included several of major groups of fungicides: sterol demethylation, bezimidazoles,
pyrimidines, phenylamines, dicarboximides, carboxanilides and morpholines.
The resistance to toxic compounds is a genetic adaptation of the fungus to one or more
fungicides that leads to a reduction in sensitivity to these compounds. This phenomenon,
described as genotypic or acquired resistance, is found in numerous fungi that have been
sensitive to the fungicide prior to exposure. Fungicide resistance can be acquired by single
mutations in genes of the pathogen or by increasing the frequency of subpopulations that are
naturally less sensitive. We have to differentiate between resistance and natural or intrinsic
insensitivity of species that are not sensitive to the action of these compounds (Delp & Bekker,
174 Plant Pathology
1985; Brent, 1995). The term lower sensitivity is used in practical situations where there is a
decreased sensitivity to a fungicide without an effect on field performance. The term field
resistance is used when both the level of resistance and frequency of resistant strains are high
and coincident, resulting in noticeable decline of field performance (Hewit, 1998).
It is to be expected that the evolutionary and dynamic progress of selection should
eventually produce fungi that are resistant to fungicides. Therefore fungicide resistance is
variable, with fungi developing resistance to some fungicides more rapidly than to others
and in some cases no resistance had been reported after long periods of fungicide use.
In fungicide resistance, we should consider how pathogens have the ability to evolve
resistant and how fungicides varies their susceptibility to resistance. Hence, resistance risk is
determined by the target pathogen and selected fungicide.
Populations of fungi are so diverse that mechanisms of resistance may be present within the
population before the fungicide is applied. The rate of resistance development in a
population depends on the resultant mechanism of resistance such as how resistance
characters are inherited, the epidemiology of the fungus, the environment, and the
persistence of selective pressure.
The overexpression of ABC and MFS genes plays an essential role in the resistance of
chemically unrelated phenomenon described as multidrug resistance or MDR drugs (Del
Sorbo et al., 2000; White, 1997). This phenomenon has been observed in a wide variety of
organisms and can be a real threat to the effective control of fungal pathogens (Fling et al.,
1991). In phytopathogenic fungi, these transporters can also be a virulence factor in
providing protection against defense compounds produced by the plant or mediating the
secretion of host-specific toxins. Also play a major role in determining the baseline
sensitivity to fungicides and other antifungal agents. (De Waard, 1997; Stergiopoulos et al.,
2003a, 2003b).
In P. digitatum, causal agent of citrus green rotten, four ABC transporters have been
identified so far. ABC transporters PMR1 (Hamamoto et al., 2001b; Nakaune et al., 1998) and
PMR5 (Nakaune, 2001; Nakaune et al., 2002) have been studied previously. Disruption of
PMR1 in sensitive and resistant strains results in an increased sensitivity to DMIs and other
compounds (Nakaune et al., 1998; Nakaune et al., 2002). However, the introduction of
resistant strains from PMR1 restores the resistance while the introduction of PMR1 from
sensitive strains does not have the same effect and does not restore the resistance. This
suggests that although PMR1 plays an important role in the sensitivity of P. digitatum
against DMIs alone does not explain the differences between sensitive and resistant strains
(Hamamoto et al., 2001). Another of the genes studied is PMR5. This gene has highly
homologous to PMR1, and also to atrB from Aspergillus nidulans and BcAtrB from Botrytis
cinerea (Schoonbeek et al., 2003), however, is strongly induced by benzimidazoles,
resveratrol and other compounds, but not for DMIs. This shows the different substrate
specificity of both proteins and may play an important role in providing protection against
natural or synthetic toxic compounds (Nakaune et al., 2002).
Sequence analysis in all four ABC transporter genes in several sensitive and resistant strains
revealed no mutations in PMR1, PMR3 and PMR4, and point mutations only were observed
in both the promoter and coding regions of PMR5 in multiple resistant strains (TBZ- and
DMI-resistant) (Snchez-Torres & Tuset, 2011). But no explanation was ascertained for the
absence of sequence changes relating to fungicide resistance in the other ABC transporters,
particularly in the PMR1 gene given that transcription of PMR1 has proven to be strongly
activated in the presence of different fungicides (Hamamoto et al., 2001b; Nakaune, 2001;
Nakaune et al., 1998).
To date, MFS transporters have been described in several fungi, e.g. Botrytis cinerea shows a
broad spectrum of resistance to different fungicides and their expression has been induced by
many of them, particularly noteworthy Bcmfs4 induction in the presence of strobilurin
(trifloxiestrobin) (Hayashi et al., 2002a, 2002b, 2003; Schoonbeek et al., 2003; Vermeulen et al.,
2001). All this means that these transporters are potential candidates for the study of factors
involved in resistance based on active eflux of these toxic compounds since they have
remarkably broad substrate specificity although they can also transport specific compounds.
Recently, five different MFS transporters have been identified and characterized in the
postharvest phytopathogenic fungus Penicillium digitatum (PdMFS1-PdMFS5). Sequence
analysis of these five genes revealed different genomic structure and although all genes
seem to be implicated in pathogenicity, only 2 out of five MFS transporters confirmed to be
involved in fungicide resistance (Snchez-Torres et al., submitted). Therefore, the most
recent thought for fungicide resistance based on active efflux of these toxic compounds is
176 Plant Pathology
now discussed. These results suggest that many genes could be involved in the mechanisms
conferring fungicide resistance to phytopathogenic fungi and some are fungicide-
dependent.
From a practical standpoint, the fact that ABC and MFS transporters determine the baseline
sensitivity to fungicides, are responsible for MDR and can act as virulence factors implies
that these carriers are an attractive target for chemical control. In this context, inhibitors of
these transporters could improve the effectiveness of control and reduce the virulence of
fungal pathogens.
3.1.2 Changes in binding target that causes a reduced affinity of the compound
fungicide
The most extent mechanism to confer DMI resistance involved mutations of CYP51 gene, the
target enzyme of DMIs fungicides and has been described for a large number of pathogens
such as Botrytis cinerea (Albertini et al., 2002, Albertini & Leroux, 2004), a substitution of Phe
for Tyr at position 136 (Y136F) was found in Uncinula necator (Dlye et al., 1997) and also in
Erisiphe graminis f. sp. hordei (Dlye et al., 1998). Two single nucleotide mutations of CYP51
resulting in amino acid substitutions Y136F and K147Q in Blumeria graminis were also found
(Wyand & Brown, 2005). Different mutations were also found in Tapesia sp (Albertini et al.,
2003), Penicillium italicum (Joseph-Horne & Hollomon, 1997), Ustilago maydis (Butters et al.,
2000) and Blumeriella jaapii (Ma et al., 2006)
Similarly, mutations have been described in the cytochrome b gene that lead to change of its
corresponding protein G143A, conferring resistance to strobilurin (Avila-Adame & Koller,
2003a, 2003b; Gisi et al., 2000, Zheng et al., 2000, Zhang, Z. et al., 2009) or the amino acid
substitution in the -tubulin target protein involved in development of resistance to
benzimidazoles in Botrytis cinerea (Banno, 2008), Venturia inaequalis and Penicillium italicum
(Koenraadt et al., 1992), Monilinia fructicola (Ma et al., 2003a), M. laxa (Ma & Michailides,
2005), P. expansum (Baraldi et al., 2003) and P. digitatum (Snchez-Torres & Tuset, 2011).
alternative route in mitochondrial respiration (Gisi et al., 2000; Schnabel et al., 2001; Wood &
Hollomon, 2003).
4. Conclusion
Advances in the development of molecular methods, especially PCR technology have
provided diagnostic laboratories with powerful tools for detection and identification of
phytopathogenic fungi. Molecular techniques have also contributed to elucidate the
phenotypic and genetic structure within species and the complexity of plant and
environment fungal populations. New technologies and improved methods with reduced
cost and improved speed, throughput, multiplexing, accuracy and sensitivity have emerged
as an essential strategy for the control of plant fungal diseases. These advances have been
complemented by the development of new nucleic acids extraction methods, increased
automation, reliable internal controls, multiplexing assays, online information and on site
molecular diagnostics. Nevertheless, molecular diagnostic tools should be complemented
with other techniques, either traditional culture-based methods or the newly emerged
proteomic, a promising tool for providing information about pathogenicity and virulence
factors that will open up new possibilities for crop disease diagnosis and crop protection.
On the other hand, fungicides continue to play a key role in strategies for the control of
diseases in crops, and the development of resistance in the target pathogens is a continuing
risk. This fact leads to many losses as control systems are not longer effective. Therefore, the
better understanding on mechanisms developed during fungicide resistance is essential for
a better management of chemical control, environment and human health.
Great advances have been made in the development of molecular methods to identify and
monitor resistance of plant pathogens to fungicides. The highly sensitive methods can
Molecular Tools for Detection of Plant Pathogenic Fungi and Fungicide Resistance 179
improve our ability of studying the evolution of fungicide resistance at the population level.
Molecular techniques can be also developed based on the different fungicide mechanisms to
rapidly detect resistant isolates. Furthermore, a timely detection of resistance levels in
populations of phytopathogenic fungi in a field would help growers make proper decisions
on resistance management programs to control plant diseases.
5. Acknowledgements
Authors want to thank Dr. J.M. Colmenero for critical reading of the manuscript. A.M.
Pastrana is recipient of an IFAPA fellowship from the Consejera de Agricultura y Pesca,
Junta de Andaluca, Spain.
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8
1. Introduction
Fungi of the genus Fusarium are worldwide occurring plant pathogens which cause severe
damages to numerous cultivable plants (Weiland et al., 2000; Mirete et al., 2004; Youssef et
al., 2007; Li et al., 2008) with the highest economical losses upon infection of maize, wheat
and barley (Windels et al., 2000; Nganje et al., 2004). Fusarium caused diseases can destroy
crops within several weeks and the infection leads to quality losses in two different aspects:
besides the reduced yield due to reduced kernel size, the fungus produces various toxic
metabolites while colonizing the plant. These mycotoxins heavily impair the quality of the
harvest (McMullen et al., 1997). The acute or chronic toxicity of Fusarium released
compounds led to the introduction of national or international limits to regulate mycotoxin
levels in food and feed (e.g. limits of the European Community since 2006).
Most Fusarium species are widely distributed in substrates such as soil, on subterranean and
aerial plant parts, plant debris, and on dead organic matter. Many Fusarium species have
active or passive means to disperse spores or conidia in the atmosphere. The ability to grow
on a broad range of substrates combined with their efficient dispersal mechanisms enables a
widespread distribution of these fungi (Burgess, 1981). Fusarium species are well adapted to
grass hosts (Leonard & Bushnell, 2003) and can colonize on many agricultural commodities
such as rice, bean and soybean. According to several studies F. graminearum and F. culmorum
are among the most aggressive plant pathogenic fungi known. F. graminearum mainly occurs
in temperate and warmer regions of the USA, China and the southern hemisphere (Osborne
& Stein, 2007). It is regarded as one of the most vigorous toxin producers and has therefore
become the most intensively studied plant pathogen (Goswami & Kistler, 2004). In contrast,
F. culmorum predominates in the cooler regions including the U.K., Northern Europe and
Canada (Osborne & Stein, 2007) and is also associated with the occurrence of many
mycotoxins (Desjardins, 2006).
important host plants. The disease is associated with F. graminearum, F. culmorum, F. poae, F.
avenaceum, F. sporotrichoides and Microdochium nivale. Each fungus contributing to FHB has
particular biological and environmental requirements, which in part explains the frequency
of occurrence in specific locations.
This destructive disease was initially described in 1884 in England and was considered a major
threat during the early years of the twentieth century (Goswami & Kistler, 2004). Nowadays,
Fusarium head blight is a disease of massive economic impact worldwide and has been ranked
by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) as the worst plant disease to hit the
nation (Windels, 2000). The losses due to direct and secondary economic impact of FHB on
wheat and barley were estimated at $2.7 billion for the period from 1998 2000 in the US
(Nganje et al., 2002). Epidemics of FHB are strongly influenced by various factors such as local
and regional environment, the physiological state and genetic background of the host, as well
as pathogen related factors including host adaptation and virulence.
Infected plant debris serves as primary substrate for common FHB pathogens, which are
able to survive the winter period as saprophytic mycelium or thick walled chlamydospores.
Warm, moist conditions in spring are favorable for the development and maturation of
conidia and perithecia, which produce ascospores (Markell & Frankl, 2002). These sticky
spores are discharged from the surface of crop debris and dispersed by wind, rain or even
insects to the host plants. Infected wheat or maize presents brown, dark purple to black
lesions on the exterior. The head of cereals has a characteristically bleached appearance,
hence the name Fusarium head blight. During prolonged wet periods infected spikelets,
glumes and kernels present pink to salmon-orange spore masses of the fungus. Maize
infections occur at the ear apex following colonization of the kernels with white mycelium,
which turns pink to red with time.
Fungal colonization is affected by numerous variables such as spike morphology, canopy
density, plant height, rainfall, relative humidity, temperature and host plant resistance (Kolb
et al., 2001; Rudd et al., 2001). Fusarium infections are increased due to the lack of completely
resistant plant material and a frequent application of unsuitable cropping systems. Pathogen
survival is favored in reduced tillage systems as residue burial speeds up the decomposition
and reduces pathogen reproduction and survival (Khonga et al., 1988; Pereyra et al., 2004).
Petcu et al., (1998) investigated the influence of crop rotations on the severity of FHB. Studies
show that the economically most lucrative cultivation of alternating maize and wheat cultures
turned out to be problematic. The increased production of these Fusarium favorable crops and
the dramatic increase in their residues remaining on the soil surface provide a large increase in
the amount of niche available to the pathogen. Fusarium non-host plants used as preceding
crops or intertillage of wheat and maize are often less profitable and therefore of low interest
for farmers. In North and South America erosion causes a dramatic loss of fertile topsoil. To
avoid this loss, no-till systems have been established to overcome the drawback of
conventional farming. However, Fusarium inoculum density increases in soil in reduced tillage
systems compared to plough treated fields (Steinkellner & Langer, 2004).
Christensen (Schroeder & Christensen, 1963) described in their work two phenotypic
measures of disease resistance; type I resistance operates against initial infection and type II
resistance describes the resistance to spreading within infected tissues. A third type of
Fusarium resistance (type III) was described by Wang and Miller (1988) as the insensitivity of
wheat lines to toxins or the ability of the resistant cultivar to degrade mycotoxins.
Integrated control strategies are essential to prevent Fusarium diseases in modern
agriculture. The use of resistant cultivars is considered necessary for numerous reasons.
Firstly, modern agronomic practices such as reduced tillage and cereal and maize rich crop
rotations have the tendency to increase the amount of Fusarium related diseases. In addition
to this, chemical control measures are only partly effective as only few fungicides are
sufficiently active against Fusarium and their application must be performed within a time
frame of a few days around the flowering stage of the plants. For the protection of maize
cultures no fungicides are commercially available up to now. Understanding Fusarium life-
cycle and infection pathways is the first step in preventing disease. Nevertheless,
uncontrollable factors such as weather conditions during as well as economic or ecologic
interests prevent sustainable success in the reduction of these pathogens. Plant breeders
have made significant progress in the development of Fusarium resistant maize and wheat
varieties by identifying genetic regions, which are linked to the resistance of plants
(Buerstmayer et al., 2003; Draeger et al., 2007). Resistance against Fusarium is a quantitative
trait, which is governed by many independent genes distributed on several distinct genetic
regions (quantitative trait loci, QTLs) in the plant genome. Therefore an effective approach
to investigate FHB resistance is the identification of the QTLs and their mapping
(Buerstmayer et al., 2009). The mapping of QTLs is the basis for further efforts towards a
straightforward marker assisted resistance breeding strategy. Interestingly, often the best
regionally adapted and highly productive crop varieties are susceptible to FHB. For this
reason, breeders are faced with the difficult task to combine adaption to certain locations
with high yield and Fusarium resistance.
The production of mycotoxins has been identified as a crucial factor for successful infection .
Deoxynivalenol is considered the most common occurring mycotoxin involving Fusarium
infection. However, DON levels in infected grain vary significantly amongst wheat cultivars
(Bai et al., 2001) infected with the same Fusarium isolate. The evaluation of Fusarium
resistance of either the parents in current breeding programs or the control of resistance
levels of novel lines can be carried out by chemical analysis of the DON accumulation in the
seeds. In general DON levels in resistant plants are much lower than those found in more
susceptible cultivars. Artificial infection of wheat-ears with Fusarium conidia followed by
determination of DON content and visual scoring of the head blight symptoms are the
currently established methods for resistance assessment. Nevertheless, the determinations of
disease symptoms in combination with the mycotoxin content of grain are both indirect
methods to evaluate plant resistance. Furthermore, both methods observe the same effect, as
visual disease symptoms are mainly caused by mycotoxin intoxication and not by the
growth of mycelium. Studies have shown that the amount of fungal mycelia formed during
infection not always correlates well with these parameters (Waalwijk et al, 2004; Hill et al.,
2006; Brunner et al., 2009; Kulik et al. 2011). Asymptomatic kernels may contain significant
amounts of mycotoxins while symptomatic kernels within the same sample may not.
206 Plant Pathology
scientists working on agricultural and plant pathology related topics recognized the potential
of this analytical tool. Within only a few years the number of annual ELISA based publications
in the AGRICOLA database rose from zero to more than 150 and numerous antibodies were
developed to detect plant pathogens belonging to different genera.
4.1.1 ELISAs based methods for the detection and quantification of Fusarium
The first immuno assay for Fusarium was developed at the University of Gttingen in 1989
by J.G. Unger and published in his PhD thesis. The author succeeded in the recognition of F.
culmorum exoantigens (compounds secreted by Fusarium during growth) by an antibody.
However, after this first success of the ELISA in Fusarium detection almost 15 years passed
by until this F. culmorum ELISA was applied to practical applications (Chala et al., 2003).
During these field tests the authors found out that the developed antibody is not specific to
F. culmorum but binds to antigens from various Fusarium species. Over the years numerous
studies on the development of anti-Fusarium antibodies have been published. Although
most authors used F. graminearum and/or F. culmorum for immunization, no group
succeeded in the production of highly specific antibodies. Gan et al., (1997) immunized
chicken with soluble exoantigens and with soluble frations from homogenized mycelia of F.
graminarum, F. poae and F. sporotrichioides. The F. graminearum and F. sporotrichioides
exoantigen antibodies showed cross-reactivities with almost all common Fusarium species.
The antibody against F. poae exoantigens showed absolutely no cross-reactivity against other
Fusarium species or against other filamentous fungi. Up to now this is the only species-
specific antibody for a Fusarium spp. Hill et al., (2006) probably produced the best-
characterized antibody so far by isolating monoclonal antibodies produced by IF8 cell lines
for the detection of Fusarium. These antibodies detected species from different phylogenetic
clades and the authors also demonstrated that no cross-reaction even with closely related
ascomycetes could be observed. Unfortunately, no publication describes the essential
analytical parameters like limit of detection, limit of quantification or a linear range of the
developed tests.
In general, antibodies detect many different Fusarium species but the specificity of PCR
based assays has not yet been obtained by immunoassays. Neither the detection of
particular species except one example for F. poae nor the detection of a particular
toxigenic group (e.g. trichothecene producers or fumonisin producers) is possible with
ELISA methods. Furthermore, most antibodies were raised against unknown compounds
secreted by Fusarium during growth in liquid medium (exoantigens). As usually the
secretion is not a constant attribute but is subjected to complex regulation, the amount of
exoantigens secreted during the infection of grains might not always be constant. For this
reason, the amount of Fusarium antigen detected in a sample may not always correlate with
the fungal biomass.
application (Chala et al., 2003) or to assess the Fusarium resistance of crop lines (Miedaner et
al., 1994, Miedaner et al., 2004, Hill et al., 2006, Slikova 2009, Rohde & Rabenstein 2005).
4.1.2.1 Evaluation of fungicide efficacy with a Fusarium ELISA
Chala et al., (2003) presented a comprehensive study on the evaluation of fungicide
application to reduce Fusarium infection and DON content in wheat. Winter wheat was
planted in four field replications and artificially infected with F. culmorum conidia at
flowering stage by spray inoculation. Five different fungicides were tested at different
application times alone and in various combinations. The efficiency of the treatment was
determined by visual scoring of disease symptoms, Fusarium ELISA, yield a 1000-grain
weight. The combination of these different methods allows the evaluation of the results
obtained by the immunoassay. The results of the field trials reveal clearly that only one
fungicide showed a high efficiency in the reduction of fungal biomass and DON content. All
applied methods led to the same conclusion. Interestingly, the application of some
fungicides at a later growth stage after flowering did not affect the fungal biomass but
slightly increased the production of DON. In general the study demonstrates clearly the
potential of the developed Fusarium ELISA to obtain a deeper insight into biomass
formation. The main advantage of the ELISA based determination of infection is the
enhanced failure-safety.
4.1.2.2 Evaluation of Fusarium resistance with ELISA tests
The comparison of the resistance of different plant varieties is often a challenge for breeders.
The increase in Fusarium resistance of novel crop lines is just marginal and for some plants like
durum or triticale disease symptoms are usually not obvious. Furthermore, other fungal
diseases like Microdochium nivale or Septoria nodurum also lead to similar symptoms as
Fusarium head blight and the result of the visual assessment might be misinterpreted. Besides
the PCR based methods described above the ELISA tests represent the only available tool to
determine fungal biomass and so the application for resistance tests is self-evident.
The first field test for Fusarium resistance based on ELISA analysis was performed in the
early 1990s (Miedaner et al., 1994). Winter rye was infected with F. culmorum colonized
wheat flour in November when the plants have reached the three-leaf status. The
colonization of the host plant started early after inoculation and increased continuously till
full maturity. Interestingly, different genotypes showed the highest variance in Fusarium
protein content during medium growth states. In adult states almost no difference in
Fusarium infection between resistant and susceptible plants was found. The disappearance
of the discrepancy results in saprophytic growth of F. culmorum on rye during ripening and
therefore the medium growth stages are the optimal date to discriminate resistant from
susceptible varieties. The same group also investigated the F. culmorum resistance of wheat
and triticale cultivars in six different environments and demonstrated the performance of
ELISA biomass determination for two more cereal crops (Miedaner et al., 2004). However,
the correlation of the ELISA based Fusarium protein content to the DON content in a sample
was not better than the correlation between DON and visual disease symptom assessment.
Another ELISA test based on monoclonal antibodies was optimized for the quantification of
Fusarium in barley (Hill et al., 2006) and was used to study the influence of the applied
analytical method on the results of resistance tests (Hill et al., 2008). A mapping population
was grown in two environments and breeding lines were grown at four different locations
Novel Methods for the Quantification of Pathogenic Fungi in Crop Plants:
Quantitative PCR and ELISA Accurately Determine Fusarium Biomass 209
and disease data were collected by visual disease assessment, determination of the DON
accumulation and the Fusarium ELISA. The obtained data were subjected to statistical analyses
and the authors calculated a model for the prediction of different replications and different
environments necessary to certainly identify differences in Fusarium resistances. Interestingly,
the determination of DON was identified as the factor that is least feasible for resistance
studies. The quantification of the Fusarium biomass by ELISA required less different locations
and fewer field replicates per location to classify barley varieties according to their Fusarium
resistance than visual disease assessment or toxin measurements.
Often the correlation between visual disease scoring and DON content is better than
between ELISA results and DON content. This fact has also been demonstrated in a
Slovakian study (Slikova et al., 2009) for the infection of winter wheat with F. culmorum. As
visual assessment just records the damage caused by the fungal toxins the correlation
between symptoms and the DON content is obvious. The fact that visual symptoms and
DON content are not independent features makes the combined use of only these two
factors for resistance determination questionable. Therefore, Slikova et al. (2009) recommend
the application of the Fusarium ELSIA to get more reliable results for plant resistance than
with the two other methods.
as a virulence factor. However, non-producing strains could also infect the wheat heads but
the amount of detected fungal DNA was only 1 to 10% of the DNA amount found in plants
infected with toxin producing strains. The infected wheat heads were also subjected to
visual assessment of disease symptoms. Although the conservative method led to the same
results the difference between toxigenic and atoxigenis strains was less pronounced. The
above described assay for F. culmorum was also used to monitor natural stem rot in wheat in
the U.K. (Nicholson et a., 2002), The authors found out that usually other pathogens than F.
culmorum were the causal agent of this disease as almost no quantifiable DNA of Fusarium
was present in the samples. The same F. culmorum assay was again used in combination
with a F. poae assay to evaluate fungicide efficiency for Fusarium head blight control in a
greenhouse experiment (Doohan et al., 1999). Under all tested conditions the applied
fungicides reduced the disease severity between 20% and 80% and in general the results
could be confirmed by visual monitoring of the disease symptoms.
A Canadian Fusarium monitoring program integrated PCR tests for F. avenaceum, F.
culmorum, F. crookwellense, F. poae, F. sporotrichioides, F. equiseti, F. pseudograminearum, and
F. graminearum to compare results with the traditional agar plating method (Demeke et al.,
2005). For 83% of the tested grain samples the two methods led to the same results.
However, the agar plate method not always gave positive results when DNA was found in
samples. This leads to the assumption that PCR based methods provide enhanced
sensitivity. Additionally, F. graminearum, F. pseudograminearum and F. crookwellense could not
be distinguished by morphological analysis whereas PCR could clearly differentiate these
species. This comprehensive study clearly demonstrated the power of DNA based methods
if integrated into Fusarium monitoring programs. PCR allows the quantification (if applied
as real-time PCR) and classification of numerous strains within a few hours of analysis.
Classical methods need some days to weeks to give the same results and quantification is
difficult as only the number of infected kernels can be determined.
An LNA-TaqMan based assays was used to investigate the differences in Fusarium
resistance of twenty novel wheat lines ranging from highly susceptible to highly resistant
(Brunner et al., 2009). The wheat-ears were inoculated with F. graminearum and F. culmorum
in two consecutive years and the formation of mycotoxins, the accumulation of Fusarium
DNA and the visual disease symptoms were recorded. This study demonstrated a certain
discrepancy between visual scoring and quantitative PCR results. In accordance to other
studies the visible symptoms matched perfectly the DNA content in medium to low
resistant lines. In contrast, highly resistant lines with low Fusarium biomass but
nevertheless high amount of toxins did sometimes not show any disease symptoms. The
authors addressed this effect to the detoxification mechanism of high resistant plants as
some toxins can be masked by the plant. So they are converted to less plant-toxic
metabololites which do not damage the wheat-ears.
5. Conclusions
Visual assessment of disease caused by Fusarium species is frequently insufficient to identify
the causal agent or to quantify the plant pathogen. In natural systems pathogenic fungi often
occur in a combination of species, which can induce similar symptoms and a visual
discrimination might be impossible. Other methods like agar plate assays rely on the fact
that viable propagules are present in a sample. Especially in harvested grain this is not
Novel Methods for the Quantification of Pathogenic Fungi in Crop Plants:
Quantitative PCR and ELISA Accurately Determine Fusarium Biomass 213
always the case as long dry periods during ripening in combination with intense UV
radiation can reduce the survival of fungal mycelium or even of conidia. Furthermore, the
morphologic discrimination of grown mycelium is difficult and experienced personal is
indispensible. Novel methods for the detection and quantification of fungal biomass based
on marker molecules (e.g. antigens or DNA) have the potential to revolutionize the field of
pathogen monitoring in plant pathology. Within the last twenty years immunoassays and
PCR methods found their way into this scientific field. ELISA test for different Fusarium
species have been developed intensely in the 1990s and were applied in numerous field
studies. However, the specificity of the produced antibodies leaded a lot to desire. Although
particular species were used for the immunization of animals the resulting antibodies did
detect many different Fusarium species. Only one group succeeded in the production of
polyclonal antibodies which were specific to a single species, namely to F. poae .
Furthermore, the re-production of antibodies is difficult as immunization is a complex
procedure. The resulting immunoglobulins can vary in their features and therefore a careful
characterization must be performed each production cycle. Interestingly with the
availability of affordable real-time PCR cyclers on the market published studies using
Fusarium ELISA almost disappeared. Most probably this tendency can be ascribed to two
crucial advantages of PCR methods: i) these methods can be performed in high throughput
and are easily transferred to other laboratories. Primers are synthesized commercially, are
cheap and they are available within a few days. ii) PCR assays are highly specific and can be
used to detect either genera or species and even distinctive isolates can be differentiated.
Although quantitative PCR provides numerous advantages to study Fusarium in its
environment only a few studies have been published to address biological problems. This
might be due to the fact that nowadays food safety related questions are of high relevance
and so the comparison between fungal DNA and mycotoxins is estimated as more
important than other applications. On the other hand, the barrier for traditional plant
pathologist might still be high to enter a technical field like quantitative PCR.
An investigation of the NCBI pubmed database reveals that the published studies applying
Fusarium PCR methods in field-trials increase continuously. Although less novel assays are
developed, more and more previously published methods are included in current studies,
which might indicate the changeover from PCR based method development to PCR
applications.
6. Acknowledgements
The authors thank the Federal Country Lower Austria and the European Regional
Development Fund (ERDF) of the European Union for financial support.
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9
1. Introduction
Castor plant (Ricinus communis L.) is a non-edible oilseed crop with unique oil features for
the chemistry industry. The crop was very important in the mid and late nineteenth century
and also during WWI. After that the crop lost its importance in developed countries
(Godfrey, 1923), but in India and Brazil it has remained as the most important non-edible
oilseed crop of the arid and semi-arid regions (Dange et al., 2005; Santos et al., 2007).
Nowadays, due the constant pressure for renewable fuels, castor has been investigated as a
potential source of biofuel, mainly in Brazil due to governmental stimulus, and this has
raised the crop importance once again. Regardless of the lack of a well established crop
system, castor hosts several pests and diseases which cause heavy losses in the crop yield.
One of the most destructive diseases of castor is gray mold, caused by the fungus Botryotinia
ricini (Godfrey) Whetzel. Actually, it is the anamorphic phase of B. ricini, known as
Amphobotrys ricini (N.F. Buchw.) Hennebert, that is responsible for disease epidemics and
heavy yield losses frequently observed in castor crops. The first epidemic outbreak caused
by this fungus was reported by H.E. Stevens of the Florida Experiment Station, Gainesville,
Florida (Godfrey, 1919, 1923). At that time, a meticulous study was conducted and much of
our knowledge regarding the disease and its causal agent was published in the classic work
of Godfrey (1923). Subsequently, only sporadic works were conducted by other scientists
around the world, consequently few advances have been made on management of gray
mold. Breeding programs have failed in developing varieties with satisfactory resistance
levels (Kolte, 1995), and chemical control is still ineffective and economically prohibitive,
mainly due to the lack of basal information about the causal organism and its biology. In
this chapter, the major aspects of castor gray mold will be reviewed.
1923). Later, the disease was reported in almost all countries where castor has been
cultivated (Kolte, 1995), having nowadays a worldwide distribution.
The first occurrence of this disease in USA was directly linked to seeds imported from
Bombay (now Mumbai), India, even though until that time, such disease had not been
described in that country (Godfrey, 1923). In his work, Godfrey (1923) did a detailed account
of the destructive potential of the gray mold of castor under favourable condition. By
attacking mainly reproductive organs of the castor plant, gray mold disease is implicated in
direct losses of yield whatever the level of infection.
In India, today the major castor producer, gray mold is found in few states and is regarded
as troublesome only in Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, in the South, where the weather
conditions are more favourable for disease development where in 1987, an epidemic
outbreak of gray mold occurred (Dange et al., 2005).
In Brazil, the disease was first reported in the So Paulo state in 1932. However, it was only
in 1936 that any attention was given to the disease due to the serious losses which occurred
that year (Gonalves, 1936). Currently, gray mold is present in almost all Brazilian states and
its importance has grown at the same time that the crop cultivation has been intensified,
mainly in those regions where the weather conditions are favourable for disease
development, including the Southern and South-eastern Brazilian states (Arajo et al., 2007;
Freire et al., 2007). In the region of the Brejo Paraibano, where the recommended sowing
period is between mid-April to early-May (Amorim Neto et al., 2000), the flowering period
(mid-June to early-August) usually coincides with highly favourable conditions for disease
development (Moraes et al., 2009). Yield losses of up to 100% are quite frequent when highly
susceptible cultivars are planted. Conversely, in Bahia the major castor producer in Brazil
gray mold is not a problem because the weather conditions are usually not favourable for
disease development.
Fig. 1. Dark sclerotia on culture medium (A); close-up view of the sclerotia (B); transversal
section through a sclerotium to show its plane-convex form (D); dichotomous branch of the
conidiophores (E); conidiogenous cells showing the synchronic conidiogenesis (C); and
close-up the conidiogenous cell to show the denticles and globose conidia (F). Photos: D.J.
Soares.
222 Plant Pathology
2.4 Symptoms
The primary targets of the fungus are the inflorescence and the capsules, in any
development stage (Fig.2) (Arajo et al., 2007; Dange et al., 2005; Gonalves, 1936; Lima et
al., 2001). Some authors (Drumond & Coelho, 1981; Batista et al., 1996) claim that the male
flowers are the first to be infected, but it is not always the case because any part of the
inflorescence can be infected, the female flowers being the preferential target. That claim
Gray Mold of Castor: A Review 223
came from the fact that the male flowers are the first to be exposed, at the earlier stage of
inflorescence formation; consequently such flowers are exposed longer to the infection units
of the fungus. However, as soon as the male flowers suffer anthesis they are no longer a
target and are hardly infected, contradicting the statement of Drumond & Coelho (1981) that
the fungus attacks first the male flowers because the anthers, being soaked with the rain
water or dew, easily retain the fungus spores carried by the wind.
Fig. 2. Symptoms of gray mold attack on castor inflorescence and raceme. A-B. Symptoms
on young inflorescences, before fertilization of female flowers. C-H. Symptoms on capsules
at distinct development stages. Photos: D.J. Soares.
The first symptoms are visible as bluish spots on the inflorescences, on both female and
male (before anthesis) flowers, and on developing fruits. On fruits, the symptoms can evolve
to circular or elliptic, sunken, dark coloured spots that can result in rupture of the capsule
(Fig.3 A-B) (Arajo et al., 2007). These symptoms are usually more frequent when a period
of low relative humidity unfavourable to fungal sporulation occurs soon after the fungus
penetrates the host tissues.
Depending on weather conditions (e.g. long periods with high relative humidity soon after
the fungus penetrates the host), the occurrence of yellow ooze at the point of infection is
frequent (Fig. 3 C-D) (Batista et al., 1996; Dange et al., 2005) as a result of the rapid
enzymatic tissue degradation. The symptoms on the male flowers, before anthesis, are small,
pale brown, necrotic spots, which can evolve to larger brown spots with a darker edge (Fig.3
E). The infected flowers and young capsules became softened due the fungal colonization
and mycelial growth is, at first, pale gray and later dark olivaceous. A profuse sporulation is
usually observed in such stage (Fig.3 F). When the infection starts on immature capsules,
they become rotten; if the infection starts later, with fully developed capsules, the seeds
usually became hollow, with coat discoloration and weight loss (Dange et al., 2005). On the
224 Plant Pathology
inflorescence, the male flowers can be infected first, but the fungus has a clear preference for
the female flowers (Fig.3 G). Infection can lead to complete destruction of the raceme (Fig.3
H), particularly if it reaches the main stem and the weather conditions are favourable for the
disease. Several other plant parts, e.g. leaves, petioles and stem can also be infected, mainly
due to the deposition or fall of infected material from the inflorescence or racemes. On
leaves, the lesions are usually irregular, but can assume an elliptic or circular pattern, the
size is very variable, sometimes coalescing and resulting in a foliar blight (Fig.3 I-J). On
petioles and stems, necrotic, sunken lesions usually are formed which can cause the
strangulation and consequently death of the parts above the infection point (Fig. K-N)
(Batista et al., 1996; Dange et al., 2005).
Fig. 3. Symptoms of gray mold on castor plants. Dark-bluish spot (A) and capsule rupture
(B) under unfavourable conditions; Gray-bluish spot with yellowish-brown ooze (C-D)
under favourable conditions; Dark brown spot on male flowers before anthesis (E); Profuse
sporulation on infected capsule (F); Infected inflorescence showing the fungus preference for
female flowers (G); Completely destroyed inflorescence (H); Leaf spot (I) and blight (J);
Apical infection (K); Petiole infection (L); Stem (M) and rachis infection (N). Photos: D.J.
Soares.
Gray Mold of Castor: A Review 225
2.5 Epidemiology
There are few studies of the epidemiological aspects of gray mold on castor. Godfrey (1923)
mentioned that temperatures around 25C and high relative humidity are highly favourable
to disease development. Such statements have been exhaustively repeated in almost all
publications about the subject over the last decades (Arajo et al., 2007; Batista et al., 1998;
Gonalves, 1936; Kimati, 1980; Lima & Soares, 1990; Massola JR & Bedendo, 1997;
Melhorana & Staut, 2005;). The minimum and maximum temperature for mycelial growth
was established by Godfrey as 12 and 35C, respectively (Godfrey, 1923).
Some complementary studies have confirmed that temperatures around 25C are
favourable to fungal growth and disease development (Arajo et al., 2003; Suassuna et al.,
2003; Sussel, 2008). At temperatures below 20C, the disease is little expressed and highly
dependent on long periods of high relative humidity (Sussel, 2008). According to Sussel et
al. (2011), there is a high correlation between the temperature and duration of leaf wetness
with the disease incidence and severity. The same authors also concluded that the disease
was more intense with a temperature of 28C and 72 hours of leaf wetness, and that for
temperatures below 15 the fungus needs more than 6 hours of leaf wetness, otherwise the
disease does not occur (Sussel et al., 2011). Even when under optimal temperatures (near
25C), the fungus appears to be highly dependent on periods of high humidity, since in a
study developed by Esuruoso (1966) with 39 castor varieties in two distinct places, Ibadan
and Ilora (West Nigeria), that share similar temperatures (24.4 to 27.9 and 24.2 to 27.2C,
respectively), but that rainfall was twofold higher in Ibadan than Ilora, the disease level in
Ibadan was 1.5 fold higher than in Ilora. This dependence on high rainfall, and not only
on high relative humidity, was also observed in a study conducted in the Paraiba state
(Northeast Brazil) where a high correlation between the disease progress and the
accumulated rainfall between the seventh and fifth day before the evaluation was
observed (D.J. Soares, unpublished data). The correlation, however, was inversely
proportional to the rainfall intensity which means that long periods of low-intensity rains
are more favourable than short periods of high-intensity rains.
Sussel (2008) concluded that the disease shows a random distribution pattern, matching its
airborne nature. However, under high rainfall, the disease assumes an aggregate pattern,
typical of those dispersed by water splash. With reference to aerobiology, Sussel (2008)
obtained a positive correlation between the average number of conidia collected daily in air
and the weather variables: minimum temperature, mean relative humidity, mean
precipitation and leaf wetness. There was an increase in the number of conidia collected
with the elevation of the minimum temperature from 14.6 to 18.1C; the same occurred
when the mean relative humidity was raised from 42 to 95% and when the daily
precipitation increased from 1 to 20 hours (Sussel, 2008, 2009a).
Under controlled conditions, at 25C and relative humidity near saturation, Soares et al.
(2010) had determined that the incubation period of B. ricini can vary from 44 to 88 hours
(average 72 h) and the latent period from 72 to 144 hours (average 96 h), depending on the
genotype.
Although in the recent years, there have been some advances in knowledge about the
epidemiology of gray mold of castor, several issues remains unresolved. Further studies are
needed to understand the role of each potential dispersal unit; how the fungus survives
226 Plant Pathology
between the growth seasons, for example, as sclerotia, on secondary hosts, on spontaneous
(volunteer) castor plants. Additionally, it is also crucial to determine whether it is possible to
predict disease development based on environmental variables, like precipitation or surface
wetness.
(Holcomb et al., 1989; Russo & Rossman, 1991), Euphorbia milli (Sanoamuang, 1990),
Euphorbia pulcherrima (Holcomb & Brown, 1990), Euphorbia heterophylla (Barreto & Evans,
1998), Euphorbia inarticulata (Alwadie & Baka, 2003), Acalypha hispida and Jatropha podagrica
(Lima et al., 2008). Besides these reports of natural infection, artificial inoculations tests have
shown that this pathogen has a wide host range within the Euphorbiaceae, including species
of economic interest, e.g. cassava (Manihot utilissima) (Holcomb et al., 1989; Kumar et al.,
2007; Lima et al., 2008). The sole report of natural infection by B. ricini outside the
Euphorbiaceae family was made by Hansen & Bega (1955) on Caladium bicolor (Araceae)
and, it is quite likely a case of fungus misidentification.
Fig. 4. Visitor insects (flies and stingless bees) on castor inflorescence infected by B. ricini (A-
C). Seeds with profuse gray mold growth and sporulation (D-E). Photos: D.J. Soares.
Hence, it is possible that the fungus can survive in the field on several other plant species
belonging to Euphorbiaceae, and these can be an inoculum reservoir of the fungus in such a
way that it would be ready to infect its preferential host, the castor plant, as soon as
susceptible tissues become available.
228 Plant Pathology
usually is conferred by numerous and complex mechanisms and can include traits such as
tolerance and disease-escape which are not strictly resistance mechanisms per se
(Robinson, 1976). It is also important to highlight the fact that horizontal resistance
usually is an efficient way to achieve disease control, and that in the recent years selection
for horizontal resistance has become easier with the use of marker-assisted breeding
(Keane, 2012).
In Brazil, several studies have been carried out aiming to select for a resistance source to
gray mold. However, what has become clear is that whilst there are differences in
susceptibility among the assayed genotypes, none has the desired resistance level (Batista
et al., 1998; Costa et al., 2004; Lima & Soares, 1990; Milani et al., 2005; Rego Filho et al.,
2007). Among the genotypes assessed in different countries, thus far, several distinct
levels of susceptibility have been observed, but not immunity (Anjani et al. 2004;
Esuruoso, 1996; Zarzycka, 1958). The way that the breeding programs are being
conducted, using only information generated by field investigations, and which are
usually affected by uncontrollable factors, is much more likely to select for field
resistance rather than for genetic resistance, i.e., the plant and raceme architecture,
together with the weather conditions, play a bigger role in the disease development, by
inducing a micro-climate formation, which might be more or less favourable to the
pathogen. This means that unless we redirect our thinking to incorporate horizontal
resistance, through a careful marker-assisted breeding program, whether it be genetic or
morphological, it will probably never be possible to obtain a variety with satisfactory
levels of resistance.
Some castor plant varieties have a thick outer wax layer which can act as a constitutive
barrier to pathogen infection. However, there is no information about the role of this wax
layer in the infection process of B. ricini and, although the adhesion of the conidia and
subsequently their penetration into the host tissue could be difficult, the wax could also act
as an elicitor; being responsible for the initial recognition of the host-pathogen interaction.
Thus, the wax layer could actually favour the pathogen rather than inhibit its development.
Field observations lead us to hypothesize that the latter, is the most probable scenario in the
present pathosystem.
less globose raceme will be difficult. In the second case, the scale does not take into account
disease severity in inflorescences or even in immature racemes, where the disease is usually
more severe and more difficult to estimate. Therefore, it is possible that the scale will
underestimate disease severity. Nonetheless, the simple fact that such a diagrammatic scale
is now available is a huge advance towards more reliable disease assessment and the
possibility of comparing assays conducted by different researchers in different localities.
Chagas et al. (2010) also developed a diagrammatic scale, with six levels, to assess the
disease severity of gray mold on castor, but similar to the scale developed by Sussel et al.
(2009), this scale was also developed based on long conical, full developed, racemes, and
thus, will face the same problem mentioned above.
Fig. 5. Diagrammatic scale to assess the gray mold severity on castor (Reprinted from: Sussel
et al. Tropical Plant Pathology, Vol. 34, No.3, pp.186-191, 2009, by permission). Numbers
represents the percent area affected by the disease.
The first attempt to evaluate disease resistance under controlled conditions was made by
C.A. Thomas & R.G. Orellana in 1963 using a biochemical test (Thomas & Orellana,
1963b). This methodology was reproduced by O.F. Esuruoso in Nigeria, a few years later
(Esuruoso, 1969). This last author concluded that the laboratory results were similar to
previous observations from field tests, and none of the tested varieties were resistant to
Gray Mold of Castor: A Review 231
the disease (Esuruoso 1969). At the Embrapa Algodo Station - a branch of the Brazilian
Agricultural Research Agency, responsible for developing research on castor - we have
developed a controlled method to assess castor resistance to gray mold. The principal
advantage of this method is to eliminate the unpredictable changes usually present under
field evaluation, and then to select the castor plants based solely on their genetic
background rather than select a phenotype. Based on such studies, it has been possible to
obtain a clear difference among the so-called susceptible and resistant genotypes, which
had been previously screened under field conditions. It has also been possible to stratify
the genotypes within at least three ranks: highly susceptible, moderately susceptible and
less susceptible (Silva et al., 2008; Soares et al., 2010), although none of the screened
genotypes were regarded as resistant.
2.7.1 Cultural
Cultural practices are usually applied at aiming to prevent the introduction of inoculum
into the field, reducing its survival, spread or build-up, or rendering the host less prone to
disease attack (Palti & Rotem, 1983; Termorshuizen, 2001). The use of varietal resistance is
regarded as the better method for disease management. However, as highlighted
previously, there are no varieties with satisfactory resistance levels to gray mold (Anjani
et al., 2003; Arajo et al., 2007; Cook, 1981; Dange et al., 2005; Kolte, 1995; Milani et al.,
2005).
Several authors have recommended the use of healthy seeds, removal of plant debris,
adequate choice of planting area and growing season, and use of less susceptible cultivars
(Galli et al., 1968; Massola Jr. & Bedendo, 2005; Sussel, 2009a). It is also recommended to use
plant spacing adjusted for maximum aeration (Kolte, 1995; Lima et al., 2005). The use of
healthy seeds, including seed treatment with fungicides, is always a desirable practice,
however, its practical benefits for the management gray mold are questionable, because as
mentioned previously, it is unlikely that such seeds will serve as an inoculum source for that
crop season, so this practice has much more value in promoting vigorous plant growth and
avoiding the introduction of the pathogen into new areas. Elimination of alternate and
reservoir hosts (euphorbiaceous hosts), as well as removal and destruction of inoculum
persisting in plant residues, are welcome practices for management of gray mold, and
232 Plant Pathology
usually result in lower disease levels. Nevertheless, this practice must be followed by
rigorous field inspection since the fungus is easily wind-dispersed, and once established in
an area, such practice will become unfeasible. Perhaps, among the recognized cultural
practices, the choice of growing season, or sowing time in such a way that spike
development and maturity occur during the dry season, consequently avoiding the long,
wet periods favourable to disease development, should be the most efficient one (Dange et
al., 2005; Kolte, 1995); as evidenced by the fact that in locations where dry weather prevails,
the disease does not occur (Godfrey, 1923; Kolte, 1995). This situation is typically observed
in the Bahia state of Brazil, as mentioned previously.
2.7.2 Chemical
Seed treatment has been the management strategy most frequently recommended (Arajo et
al., 2007; Batista et al., 1996; Godfrey, 1923; Gonalves, 1936; Massola Jr. & Bedendo, 2005;
Milani et al., 2005; Sussel, 2009), mainly to avoid the introduction of the pathogen into new
areas. However, as the pathogen is air-borne and since it is already reported in almost all
countries where castor is cultivated, the efficacy of such measures needs to be corroborated,
because doubts about the role of the seeds in this pathosystem, as a primary inoculum
source, still need to be clarified.
After disease establishment, fungicide spraying is usually the only way to stop or reduce the
disease progress. However, there are few studies on chemical control of gray mold, and, of
the fungicides tested, none is registered for use on castor crops in Brazil. According to
Arajo et al. (2007), spraying of systemic fungicides soon after the appearance of the first
symptoms delayed the epidemic and reduced disease progress.
In India Dange et al. (2005) recommended two prophylactic sprays with carbendazim
(0.05%): the first at 50% of flowering; and the second, when the first disease symptoms
appear. Although, Anjani et al. (2004) considered that non-genetic management measures
have failed to control gray mold.
In the last decades, significant progress has been achieved regarding the use of fungicides to
control plant diseases. Several new active fungicides with distinct modes of action, and
usually with high specificity, have provided satisfactory levels of control of many plant
diseases. However, for gray mold of castor, the main issue is not the ineffectiveness of
fungicidal products, but the lack of research on the most appropriate timing of fungicide
application and optimum dose, including also cost-benefit analyses.
Preliminary studies under controlled conditions have shown that carbendazim and
azoxystrobin are effective against the gray mold pathogen (Bezerra, 2007). According to
Chagas (2009), however, azoxystrobin was ineffective against B. ricini, while carbendazin
and several others fungicides, including tebuconazole, iprodione and procymidone, were
highly effective.
A field study, conducted under highly favourable conditions for disease development and
using susceptible varieties, has confirmed that procymidone and iprodione are effective in
disease control, but only if applied at the beginning of the epidemic and at weekly intervals.
Where the timing of the first spraying was lost, and the application intervals were longer (15
Gray Mold of Castor: A Review 233
days), the use of the same fungicides could not stop the disease and the losses reached 100%
(D.J. Soares unpublished data).
Despite the limited studies dealing with chemical control of gray mold of castor, there are
several fungicides known as botryoticides which are effective in protecting crops against
Botrytis spp. (Leroux, 2007), and probably we can assume that these fungicides also are
effective against B. ricini. In several Botrytis pathosystems, there is a high concern about the
use of fungicides just before, or even after the harvest because of the toxicological risks of
their residues (Leroux, 2007). In contrast, in castor crops, such a restriction is not a concern
and fungicides can be applied just before harvest. However, if used indiscriminately, there
must be concern about resistance phenomena associated with several major botryticide
families, including benzimidazoles, phenylcarbamates and dicarboxymides (Leroux, 2007).
Hence, control of gray mold of castor must consider several, rather than just one,
management practices, as is currently recommended for the management of other Botrytis
diseases (Leroux, 2007).
2.7.3 Biological
There are several studies dealing with the use of biological control agents, mainly
Trichoderma spp. and Clonostachys rosea to control diseases caused by Botrytis spp. (Elad &
Stewart, 2007). If we consider the fact that the genera Botrytis and Amphobotrys are
biologically similar and, probably, phylogenetically related, we could expect that the use
of such biological control agents could be applied as an effective strategy in the
pathosystem B. ricini x R. communis. Actually, there are some studies conducted with
Trichoderma and Clonostachys rosea for the control of gray mold of castor and promising
results have been obtained (Bhattiprolu & Bhattiprolu, 2006; Chagas, 2009; Demant et al.,
2006; Raoof et al., 2003; Tirupathi et al., 2006). However, it is clear that, although
promising, these results are still experimental and much work needs to be done before
permanent recommendations regarding the use of biological control agents can be
secured for gray mold management.
3. Future challenges
The major problem about castor gray mold remains the lack of basic knowledge about its
causal agent, how the disease develops, which factors are conducive to epidemics, and how
we can manage it. It is necessary to elucidate, for example, what is the role of the climatic
variables over the monocyclic components of the disease and how they affect the
development of epidemics in the field. A better understanding of such relationships will
determine which areas are suitable to grow castor. It is also imperative to know whether
sexual reproduction is occurring within B. ricini populations in order to prevent fungicide
resistance developing, perhaps by recommending permutations of fungicides with distinct
active molecules and to determine the role of ascospores during the beginning of epidemics.
However, we must first determine which fungicides are effective against gray mold, as well
as their timing and frequency of application. We must also determine how resistance to the
disease is inherited and if there are any phenotypic or genetic markers associated with it, so
that breeders can more effectively generate resistant varieties using marker-assisted
programs. Additionally, economic and cost-benefit analyses should be conducted to
234 Plant Pathology
4. Conclusion
Despite being one of the most important diseases of castor worldwide, causing severe
losses on castor yield for almost a century, since its first report, gray mold is still poorly
studied. The recent concern about renewable energy sources has proportioned a unique
opportunity to draw attention back to this pathosystem. So, researchers involved with
castor cultivation must now take this opportunity to try to elucidate the many still to be
answered questions about this disease in order to mitigate the constant menace of gray
mold to castor crops.
5. Acknowledgment
The author wishes to thank the CNPq (Proc. 472953/2009-5) and Petrobrs (TC
0050.0064181.10.9) for the financial support on research of castor gray mold. I also wish to
thanks Dr. Harry C. Evans by his priceless suggestions to improve the text.
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10
1. Introduction
Crops grown in the tropics are subject to different kinds of disease pressure from those
produced in temperate regions. The greater biodiversity found in the tropics, including
diversity of fungi, is reflected by the larger number of pathogen species in tropical regions
(see Ploetz, 2007; Wellman, 1968, 1972). Perennial crops, and tropical perennials in
particular, have features in common that may predispose them to pathogen infections.
Pathogen inocula, such as microsclerotia, may build up from year to year in perennial crops
(Pennypacker, 1989). Also, tropical conditions are usually suitable for the year-round
survival and propagation of pathogen species, unlike temperate climates which have a
cooler season when pathogen populations die off or are reduced. Tropical perennial crops
often include susceptible genotypes on the farm and the presence of susceptible host
material encourages the production of inoculum and the initiation of new infections (Ploetz,
2007). Ploetz (2007) remarks that the presence of susceptible hosts is a particularly important
barrier to disease control in tropical perennials.
Diseases in the tropics may be complicated by interactions between different pathogens, or
between pathogens and insect pests (Holliday, 1980; Ploetz, 2006; Vandermeer et al., 2010;
Anonymous, 2010). Disease complexes involving a number of fungal pathogens or fungi
and nematodes are common in tropical situations. Interactions between pathogens and
environmental stress may also occur. Crops can become more susceptible to pathogen
infections when weakened by environmental stress such as drought, temperature extremes,
and exposure to sunlight or wind (Agrios, 2005). Stressed plants, or plants sustaining
damage caused by insects or other pathogens, may also be susceptible to attack by
secondary pathogens or pathogens that infect through wounds (Palti, 1981). Nutrient
deficiencies may increase the susceptibility of crops to disease. In tropical perennial crops,
poor plant nutrition is likely to be a particularly important contributing factor to production
losses (Schroth et al., 2000). In addition to lower production due to nutrient deficiency, low
nutrition may predispose plants to diseases, increasing losses further. Nutrient deficiency
causes the plant to become weakened and generally more susceptible to infection. Under
such conditions, infection by weakly pathogenic species that would normally cause few
problems may become more serious. The incidence and severity of particular diseases may
also be linked to deficiencies of particular nutrients. However, much more research has been
242 Plant Pathology
conducted on the relationships between particular nutrients and diseases in annual crops,
than in perennial species, particularly tropical perennials.
Many tropical perennials are grown in an agroforestry situation with other crop species.
Unlike the situation with annual cropping, there are fewer opportunities to include fallow
periods or rotations in perennial systems during which inoculum loses its viability and the
system can in general recover. In tropical perennial systems, soil-borne pathogens, such as
nematodes, may build up over time. An important aim in the management of these systems
is to achieve a position of equilibrium between pests/diseases and the predators and
parasites that keep them in check (Schroth et al., 2000). Furthermore, as perennial crops are
present more or less permanently in the system, they remove nutrients on a continuous
basis, without a fallow period during which soil fertility can be restored. In this light, the
role of the nutrient status of tropical perennials in mitigating disease is an important topic
and deserves attention from researchers.
Many diseases of tropical perennial crops are new encounter diseases which develop
following production in new areas outside of the region of the crops origin (Ploetz, 2007).
At first, such plantings may enjoy a mainly disease-free period with high productivity. They
are removed from the pressures of co-evolved pathogens and pests in their region of origin.
However, such a honeymoon period ends when new fungal pathogens (as well as other
pathogens and pests) transfer from hosts indigenous to the region in which the crop is being
produced (Keane and Putter, 1992). The indigenous hosts often remain unidentified. This is
largely because the fungus causing the new disease often resides asymptomatically on its
original host plant (for example, as an endophyte) (Ploetz, 2007). New encounter diseases
may cause devastating losses. Unlike co-evolved pathogens in the region of the crops
origin, new encounter pathogens have few antagonists that could reduce disease
incidence or severity. Poor growing conditions and poor farm management may further
exacerbate the situation.
enhance disease prevention. Further studies are needed to ascertain whether nutrient
elements have similar roles in tropical perennial crops.
Macronutrient elements
In tropical perennials crops, as in annuals, disease is often a consequence of inadequate
nutrition, particularly of nitrogen (N). Low supplies of N may predispose plants to infections
by facultative parasites such as Fusarium spp. However, most research on the effect of N
supply on disease has been conducted on temperate annuals (Agrios, 2005; Jones et al., 1989;
Palti, 1981). For example, diseases in species of the Solanaceae family including Fusarium
wilt, Alternaria early blight, Pseudomonos solanacearum wilt, Sclerotium rolfsii and Pythium
damping off are increased under low N conditions (see Agrios, 2005). Vascular wilts caused
by F. oxysporum in the annual crops tomato, cotton and pea, as well as Alternaria blights of a
number of crops, may also be increased under low N conditions (Palti, 1981).
In contrast to cases where a low N supply predisposes crops to disease, research on annual
crops has demonstrated that an excessive N supply increases disease or damage caused by
some pests and pathogens (Jones et al., 1989; Palti, 1981 p.136). Pest and pathogen attack of
above ground parts of the plant may be encouraged by high N in the presence of low K and
P (Desaeger et al., 2004); a high N/K ratio encourages insect herbivory by increasing the
content of free amino acids in plant tissues (Marschner, 1995). A number of studies with
cereals and other crops have shown that obligate pathogens in particular, such as Puccinia
spp. causing rust and other biotrophs, can be encouraged by a high N supply (see Palti,
1981). For example, an increase in rice blast disease (Magnaporthe grisea) was observed in
upland rice, which had been treated with the green manure of an alley crop with a high N
content (Maclean et al., 1992). Possibly excess N might also favour the development of
infections by obligate fungal parasites in tropical perennials although there is little evidence
for this. For example, a poor nutrient status in coffee plants has been reported to predispose
them to rust infection (Waller et al., 2007 p. 302).
The form of N supplied can be a significant factor in plant disease. A supply of ammonium-
N may predispose plants to certain diseases, while nitrate-N is favourable for the
development of others (Palti, 1981). For example, Fusarium wilt severity in some crops is
greater when N is supplied as ammonium, while Verticillium wilts are enhanced by a
nitrate-N supply (see Section 4.1). Possibly this is connected to a pH effect in the
rhizosphere. Fusarium wilts are favoured by acidic soils and Verticillium wilts by a higher
soil pH (see Palti, 1981). Uptake of ammonium-N occurs in exchange for protons (H+ ions),
causing a decrease in pH in the rhizosphere while nitrate uptake has the opposite effect on
pH as OH- ions are pumped out by roots in exchange for NO3- ions (Rice, 2007). Pathogenic
fungi may be particularly sensitive to localised changes in the rhizosphere, such as pH
fluctuations.
Some tropical perennial crops, notably banana, coffee, coconut and cocoa, have a high
demand for potassium (K), suggesting that K deficiency may occur in areas that produce
these crops over a long-term (see Section 3, below). This is particularly the case in areas
planted with perennials that receive insufficient levels of fertiliser. In agroforestry farming
systems, mulch from woody biomass (e.g. pruned branches) can be a good source of K and,
conversely, as K is sequestered by woody species, this may create K-deficiency in sites
which already have low levels of K in the soil (Beer et al., 1998). Potassium is a mobile
244 Plant Pathology
element with multiple functions in the plant. It acts as a counter-ion for anion transport,
regulates stomatal aperture and the water potential of plant cells, affects cell wall plasticity,
as well as other roles (Rice, 2007). It promotes wound healing and decreases frost injury
(Palti, 1981). Potassium deficiency has been found to be linked to diseases in a number of
temperate crops (see Palti, 1981) and a high K supply can improve resistance of plants to
fungal and bacterial pathogens (Marscher, 1995; Perrenoud, 1977; 1990). The mechanism of
resistance in some disease-resistant genotypes might be related to a greater efficiency in K
uptake (Prabhu et al., 2007). The N/K ratio can affect resistance: if it is too high cells have
thinner cell walls and weaker membranes and are more prone to pathogen attack
(Perrenoud, 1990; Potash Institute, www.ipipotash.org). For similar reasons, cereals may
become more prone to lodging. A low potassium/chlorine (K/Cl) ratio in plant tissues,
which might result from the application of chloride-containing compounds such as
ammonium fertilisers, may predispose plants to disease (e.g. wheat rust caused by Puccinia
spp. or other diseases, see Prabhu et al., 2007; Jones et al., 1989). K-deficiency increases the
concentration of soluble sugars in leaf tissues providing a substrate for many pathogens
(Potash Institute, www.ipipotash.org). It is likely that the susceptibility of tropical perennial
crops to some pathogens is also increased under conditions of K deficiency. In a study on tea
plants, for example, a high K supply reduced nematode and borer damage (Muraleedharan
and Chen, 1997). Another study showed that supplying K reduced Fusarium wilt in oil palm
(Turner et al., 1970). However, few research studies have been conducted that could confirm
a link between K nutrition and disease incidence or severity in tropical perennial crops.
Phosphorus (P)-deficiency is especially limiting to production of perennial crop in many
tropical soils. Most P in the soil is in a fixed form (unavailable to plants) and the proportion
of fixed P is increased at low soil pH levels (see Rice, 2007). Very low levels of available P
are found in acid tropical soils (Mengel and Kirkby, 1982 p. 471). Woody biomass is very
low in P, unlike K, and, therefore, external sources of P are often necessary in farm
management (Beer et al., 1998). Phosphorus nutrition improves crop vigour and may
decrease severity of diseases through new growth (Smyth and Cassell, 1995; Buresh, 1997).
Improved root growth by P nutrition may allow the plant to escape attack by soil-borne
fungal pathogens or nematodes (Prabhu et al., 2007). Foliar application of phosphates may
decrease diseases such as powdery mildew (Reuveni and Reuveni, 1998). Incidence of
anthracnose (caused by Colletotrichum lindemuthianum) in susceptible cowpea cultivars was
found to be higher in plants grown without applied P than in plants grown with P supplied
at rates up to 80 kg of P fertiliser/ha (Adebiton, 1996). In the same study, disease severity in
all of the cowpea cultivars tested was also decreased by P amendment and chickpea
genotypes with resistance to Ascochyta blight had higher tissue concentrations of P and K
than susceptible genotypes, which had a higher N content.
Mycorrhizal fungi, which form symbiotic associations with the roots of tropical perennials,
such as coffee and banana, play a crucial role in accessing sources of P for their host plants.
These fungi can access sources of P in the soil that are unavailable to non-mycorrhizal plant
roots. As well as decreasing the impacts of plant pathogens (Azcon-Aguilar and Barea,
1996), mycorrhizal plants have higher contents of certain nutrients, such as P. An example of
this was demonstrated by greenhouse experiments conducted on coffee by Vaast et al.
(1997). Coffee plants inoculated at an early stage with AM fungi had higher tissue P contents
than non-mycorrhizal plants. High P tissue contents were maintained following inoculation
with the nematode pathogen Pratylenchus coffeae and these plants also had fewer root lesions
Effect of Nutrition and Soil Function on Pathogens of Tropical Tree Crops 245
than non-mycorrhizal plants inoculated with the nematode or mycorrhizal plants that had
been inoculated with the AM fungi at a later stage. Care needs to be taken with supplying
inorganic P to crops as an excessive external P supply can inhibit mycorrhizal development.
This may lead to a shortage of other nutrients, such as zinc, that mycorrhizal roots are
efficient at accessing for the plant (Andrade et al., 2009).
An adequate supply of calcium (Ca) has been demonstrated to enhance resistance to a
number of diseases in annual crop species caused by pathogens such as Rhizoctonia solani,
Sclerotium spp., Botrytis spp., Fusarium oxysporum and the nematodes Meloidogyne spp. and
Pratylenchus sp. (Agrios 2005; Jones et al., 1989). Resistance of lucerne to nematodes was
shown to increase with supplied Ca (see Palti, 1981 p. 142). A large proportion of Ca in
plants is present in the apoplast and, influences cell structural properties, especially of the
cell wall (Rice, 2007). Increased levels of Ca-pectate complexes in the cell wall are likely to
increase resistance to vascular wilt pathogens because this form of pectate is resistant to
breakdown by endopolygalacturonase enzymes produced by fungi to degrade pectin in the
xylem vessel walls. Ca-pectin complexes might also impede the progress of wilt pathogens
growing within the xylem (Corden, 1965; Pennypacker, 1989; Waggoner and Dimond, 1955).
However, Ca also has metabolic functions within the symplast as a secondary messenger in
signalling pathways (Rice, 2007). Calcium possibly plays a significant role in mechanism(s)
of disease resistance in fruits. A relatively large proportion of Ca taken up by plants is
distributed to fruits and low Ca has been linked to increased incidence of fruit diseases such
as brown-eye spot in coffee berries (see Section 4.2). Groundnut pods have a high Ca
demand and pod rot caused by Pythium and Rhizoctonia spp. has been linked to a low Ca
content. High rates of magnesium and K application can reduce the Ca content of pods,
increasing disease severity (Prabhu et al., 2007)
Sulphur (S) is a component of defense-related peptides and proteins such as glutathione and
phytoalexins. Application of S to deficient soil reduced leaf spot, caused by Pyrenopeziza in
oil seed rape and stem canker caused by Rhizoctonia solani in potato (Haneklaus, 2007). The
effect of S nutrition on diseases of tropical perennials is largely unknown. However,
deposits of elemental sulphur (S) were observed in the xylem of cocoa plants in response to
infection with Verticillium dahliae (Resende et al, 1996; Cooper and Williams, 2004). Similar
findings were made in tomato (Williams et al., 2002 see Haneklaus, 2007). Elemental S is
toxic to some fungal pathogens and may be considered to be a phytoalexin in its own right
(Resende et al., 1996). Magnesium (Mg) is an essential component of chlorophyll and,
therefore, the photosynthetic systems of plants. However, a direct relation between Mg and
plant disease has been less commonly demonstrated than with the other macronutrient
elements. Magnesium, with K, plays a role in phloem-loading of sugars (Cakmak et al.,
1994). Magnesium also activates enzymes such as glutathione synthetase.
Micronutrient elements
Micronutrients have a diverse range of functions in plants: for example, as enzyme co-
factors with redox roles and, in the case of elements such as boron and silicon, in tissue
strengthening or structural functions. The numerous biochemical functions of
micronutrients are reflected by their roles in a diverse range of mechanisms of disease
resistance. Zinc (Zn) nutrition appears to be involved in resistance to many diseases. The
mechanisms involving Zn in disease resistance are unclear but Zn acts as a co-factor for
numerous enzymes (Rice, 2007). Stimulation of root growth by Zn may account for some
246 Plant Pathology
observed cases of disease resistance (Duffy, 2007). Zinc application to soils reduces attack by
root pathogens of tomato, including Fusarium solani, Rhizoctonia solani and Macrophoma
phaseoli, and also Rhizoctonia root rots of wheat, chickpea, cowpea and medicago (Duffy,
2007; Gaur and Vaidge, 1983; Kalim et al., 2003; Streeter et al., 2001). In tropical perennials,
the role of Zn in disease resistance remains to be investigated. However, Zn-deficiency in
rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) predisposes the tree to infection with Oidium heveae (Duffy, 2007).
Zinc has been reported to alleviate Phytophthora diseases. Low Zn levels in soils and leaf
tissues were associated with a high incidence of Phytophthora pod rot (or black pod) of cocoa
in Papua New Guinea (Nelson et al., 2011). Supplying Manganese (Mn) has been shown to
alleviate various diseases in a number of crop plant species (Palti, 1981; Thompson and Huber,
2007). Manganese occurs in different redox states and while it is present in healthy tissues as
the Mn2+ ion, it accumulates at sites of pathogen attack in the Mn4+ form, for example in rice
affected by blast (Thompson and Huber, 2007). Iron (Fe) has an essential role in plant cells as a
co-factor in redox reactions and other functions. Fe is mainly available to plants as its reduced
ion, Fe2+. Verticillium wilt in mango caused by V. albo-atrum, and in groundnut caused by V.
dahliae was mitigated in both cases by the application of Fe in chelated form (see Palti, 1981 p.
142). On the other hand, control of Fusarium wilt in tomato was favoured by low Fe (Woltz
and Jones, 1981). Similarly, Fusarium wilt has been shown to be lower at low levels of Mn. F.
oxysporum has a particularly high demand for some micronutrient elements, especially Mn, Fe
and Zn (Jones et al., 1989; Woltz and Jones, 1981). The supply of Mn, Fe and possibly other
nutrients, to F. oxysporum strains causing vascular wilt may therefore increase disease
incidence and/or severity (see section 4.1, below).
The availability of other micronutrients to plants has been linked to disease alleviation in
particular instances. Copper (Cu) deficiency decreases lignification in the xylem and has been
linked to lodging in cereals (Evans et al., 2007). Copper has direct toxic effects on pathogens
as well. A Cu supply protects grapes and hops from Downy mildew, caused by Plasmopara
viticola and Pseudoperonospora humuli, respectively (see Evans et al., 2007). Nickel (Ni), like Fe
and Zn, is a co-factor of some enzymes, such as ureases, which break down urea into less
toxic forms (Rice, 2007). Nickel application has been shown to reduce brown spot in rice
(caused by Cochliobolus miyabeanus syn. Helminthosporium oryzae). Supplying molybdenum
(Mo) reduced late blight in potato and Ascochyta blight in beans and peas (Palti, 1989 p.
143). As a co-factor of nitrate reductase, this element plays a particularly important role in
the reduction of nitrate to ammonium (Rice, 2007).
Silicon (Si), now regarded as an essential micronutrient, has been shown to enhance disease
resistance in many instances (Datnoff et al., 2007). In sugar cane, ring spot was alleviated by
Si amendments (see Datnoff et al., 2007). Low Si in rice has been linked to susceptibility to a
number of pathogens including Pyricularia, Sclerotium oryzae, Cochliobolus and Xanthomonas
oryzae (Palti, 1981 and references within). A supply of Si enhances resistance to rice blast
(Datnoff et al., 2007). Supplying Si to coffee reduced leaf disease and nematode infections in
roots (see Sections 4.2 and 4.5). Possibly Si, with other nutrients such as Ca and boron (B),
influences cell wall properties and enhances mechanical strengthening of tissues (Rice,
2007). Shen et al. (2010) tested the effect of potassium silicate on in vitro growth of some
plant pathogens, including Fusarium oxysporum, Rhizoctonia solani and Pestalotiopsis
clavispora, finding no influence if the media pH was maintained at the same level as the
control. They suggested that the mechanism by which Si confers resistance may be related to
provision of a physical barrier to pathogen infection or to the induction of a defense
Effect of Nutrition and Soil Function on Pathogens of Tropical Tree Crops 247
response in the host, rather than to a chemical effect. Silicon and other elements, including
Ca and B, may be of particular importance in resistance to facultative pathogens, wound
invading pathogens and nematode infections.
Soil acidity or low pH, common in the tropics, may be increased under particular crops,
especially long-term perennial crops, or by the application of some kinds of mineral fertiliser
(Jones et al., 1989). Soil pH decreases when forest soils are turned over to perennial crops,
such as coffee and cocoa (Beer, 1988; Beer et al., 1998; Hartemink, 2005). Lowering soil pH
decreases the availability of basic cations, particularly Ca and Mg. However, increased soil
248 Plant Pathology
acidity increases the availability of other cations to plant roots. These include the cations of
Mn and aluminium (Al) which can reach toxic levels as their uptake by plants increases. The
proportion of soil P that is fixed and unavailable for plant uptake increases in acid
conditions (Mengel and Kirkby, 1982). Liming can reduce the severity of a number of
diseases perhaps by increasing the availability of a number of nutrients to crops, as well as
providing a source of Ca, reducing Al toxicity and improving soil structure (Palti, 1981 p.
142). The increase in pH in limed soils also favours the growth of bacteria, including
actinomycetes, which include species that are antagonistic to fungal pathogens (Palti, 1981
p. 29; Jones et al., 1989).
Shade and nutrition
Tropical perennials produced in agroforestry systems are affected by other species on the
farm, including shade trees in the case of shade-requiring tree crops such as cocoa and
coffee (Schroth et al., 2001). Importantly for such shade-requiring species, managed shade
can reduce incidence and severity of some pests and diseases. Shade may also reduce stress
to tree crops by preventing extremes in temperature, water loss etc. that may result from
exposure (Staver et al., 2001). This, in turn, mitigates diseases that become more severe in
stressed plants. Removal of shade can increase photosynthesis and, therefore, raise the
productivity of tree crops such as coffee and cocoa. The removal of shade from coffee farms,
for example, can provide double the yields of shaded coffee in the short-term (Waller et al.,
2007). However, this may be followed by impacts from other problems, including increased
susceptibility to diseases such as brown-eye spot (see Section 4.2), wind and storm damage,
frost damage at higher altitudes, increased evapotranspiration (and water loss) and lower
levels of soil organic matter (Waller et al., 2007 p. 313). Conditions such as overbearing
dieback and sunscorch of coffee (see Section 4.4) may result from shade removal. Other twig
and leaf blights, such as anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides on cocoa grown
in Indonesia become more severe following shade removal (Agus Purwantara, pers. comm.).
Conversely, excessive shade and inadequate pruning can provide suitable conditions for
other coffee and cocoa pathogens, such as Corticium spp. (causing web blight and pink
disease), Phytophthora palmivora (causing pod rot and other diseases in cocoa) and Mycena
citricolor (causing South American leaf spot in coffee). Shade trees may be sources of other
pathogens with wide host ranges such as the root pathogens Armillaria and Ganoderma spp.
Shade trees have a mixed effect on the plant nutrition of other crops in the agroforestry
system (Schroth et al., 2001). They may compete with crops for water and nutrients in the
soil and sequester nutrients in their biomass (Palm, 1995). However, they also provide
inputs of nutrients to the system through leaf litter or by nitrogen-fixation. In Central
America, Cordia alliodora shade trees on each hectare of coffee produce 5.7 tons of leaf litter
per year, containing 114 kg N, 7 kg P and 54 kg K (Beer, 1988). Forest trees providing shade
for cocoa in West Africa produced 5 tons of leaf litter per hectare each year, containing 79 kg
N and 4.5 kg P (Murray, 1975). Legume shade trees in cocoa and coffee agroforestry systems
provide approximately 60 kg N ha-1y-1 by biological fixation of N2 (Beer, 1988). However,
some legumes may cause decreases in soil pH. Somarriba and Beer (2011) reported that
timber species grown with cocoa did not impact cocoa production. Shade trees with
relatively deep roots can remobilise nutrients in the system (Schroth et al., 2001). Beer et al.
(1998) cite reports of lower leaching rates of N under shaded coffee (9 kg ha-1y-1) than under
unshaded coffee (24 kg ha-1y-1).
Effect of Nutrition and Soil Function on Pathogens of Tropical Tree Crops 249
necessary. As the pathogen can be harboured by the bunch stalks, sanitation measures
should be applied (Kohler et al., 1997). Some studies on F.oxysporum wilts suggest that
nutrient availability to both the plant and the pathogen may affect the level of disease
severity. The factor(s) causing the wilt are unclear: in Fusarium wilt of tomato it has been
attributed to physical blockage or by the secretion of toxins (Walker, 1972 p. 300). Reducing
soil acidity by liming is used to reduce F. oxysporum infection of coffee plants (Kohler et al.,
1997). Possibly, liming reduces the availability of some micronutrients to the fungus. As
mentioned previously, F. oxysporum has a particularly high demand for some
micronutrients, including Mn, Fe and Zn. Mn may be in particular demand by the pathogen.
Jones and Woltz (1972) showed that the control of Fusarium wilt of tomato by liming could
be reversed by supplying Mn in chelated form to the limed soils. Liming may also help to
control Fusarium wilts by changing the soil microbial populations. Under conditions of high
pH, bacteria, including actinomycete, populations increase, including those of antagonistic
species (Jones et al., 1989). Increased calcium supply to the plant has been shown to reduce
the severity of Fusarium wilt of tomato (Walker, 1972 p. 303). The mechanism involved may
be related to the increase in resistance conferred by Ca to enzymatic breakdown of pectate
compounds by the fungus, which might also account for the effect of Ca supply on reducing
Verticillium wilt (see below).
As mentioned previously, the form of N that is present in the soil, whether as nitrate or
ammonium ions can influence the incidence and severity of vascular wilts (see Section 2).
Application of N as ammonium fertiliser can increase Fusarium wilt: this has been
suggested to be an effect of increased acidity or related to a reduction in the K/Cl ratio
(Jones et al., 1989). A study on Fusarium wilt of banana by Nasir et al. (2003) suggested that
the effect of the form of N supplied on disease severity is not related to the activity of the
pathogen. When banana plantlets were transplanted into soils infested with F. oxysporum, an
increase of wilt disease severity and the invasion of roots by the pathogen were found to be
independent of F. oxysporum activity in the soil (Nasir et al, 2003). Amendment of soil with
chicken manure increased disease severity, but not F. oxysporum activity; it appeared that the
increase in disease and pathogen invasion was a consequence of supplying N as the
ammonium-form but that this was not connected to pathogen activity in the soil. Another
study demonstrated that a lower rate of germination of F. oxysporum chlamydospores
occurred in soils that had an adequate supply of Ca, particularly in relation to other basic
cations, Mg and K (Chuang, 1988; 1991). The same study indicated that higher soil pH
values and populations of actinomycetes also decreased spore germination rates.
Domingues et al. (2001) compared banana field plots which differed in their capacity to
suppress Fusarium wilt. Soils that suppressed disease had a lower proportion by weight of
water-stable aggregates, than conducive soils. They hypothesised that the higher proportion
of water-stable aggregates in the conducive soils favoured anaerobiosis, which increased
availability of reduced Fe ions for the pathogen, which as mentioned previously, has a high
demand for micronutrients, such as Fe.
Verticillium wilt caused by Verticillium dahliae also occurs in some perennial crops. While
Fusarium wilt is encouraged by acidic soils, Verticillium wilt is favoured by a higher soil
pH. A build-up of inocolum can occur in perennial crop species affected by V. dahliae; in the
case of Verticillium wilt of pistachio, new infections are initiated by microsclerotia, which
can survive for long periods on pistachio roots. A higher incidence of Verticillium wilt has
been found in pistachio trees under conditions of K deficiency (Pennypacker, 1989). This
Effect of Nutrition and Soil Function on Pathogens of Tropical Tree Crops 251
Particularly serious leaf diseases of banana include black sikatoga (or black leaf streak)
caused by Mycosphaerella fijiensis (syn. Paracercospora fijiensis), yellow sikatoga
(Mycosphaerella musicola syn. Pseudocercospora musae), freckle caused by Guignardia musae
(syn. Phyllosticta musarum) and Black Cross (Phyllachora musicola) which may be associated
with previous infections with Cordana musae. Black sikatoga disease is reduced under shade
(Ploetz, 2003; Stover, 1972). The disease may increase under conditions of poor nutrition
and, therefore, improved host nutrition is one recommended control measure (Nelson et al.,
2006; Mobambo et al., 1994); adequate phosphorus nutrition may be particularly necessary
for disease alleviation.
Algal leaf spot disease occurs on a number of tropical perennials including breadfruit,
citrus, guava, cocoa, mango, soursop and black pepper. The causal agent is Cephaleuros
virescens or other species of the same genus. Orange and green spots can be seen on leaves
and young stems, particularly in trees weakened by stress or in periods of high rainfall
(Nelson, 2008b). In avocado, poor plant nutrition, lack of soil drainage and still conditions
(e.g. under dense canopies) are predisposing factors for algal infection (Nelson, 2008b).
A study in Brazil indicated a link between N nutrition and infection of citrus trees with the
bacterial pathogen, Xylella fastidiosa causing variegated chlorosis disease (see Huber and
Thompson, 2007). Nitrification increased disease severity but where a groundcover grass
species was planted between rows of citrus trees, a decrease in the disease was
demonstrated; this was explained by the inhibiting effect of the ground cover crop on
nitrification. Nitrification decreases concentrations of ammonium ions in the soil and this, in
turn, decreases Mn availability to the plant. Inhibition of nitrification caused an increase in
Mn uptake by 50%. Thus in this case it appears that an increase in availability of Mn confers
resistance to the host rather than favouring the pathogen, as in some Fusarium wilts.
Rusts
Rust in banana is caused by Uredo musae and in coffee by Hemileia vastatrix. In some annual
crop species, rusts may be encouraged by high levels of N fertilisation (see Section 2).
However, coffee rust has been reported to be more severe on plantations grown under
nutrient poor conditions (Waller et. al., 2007, p. 302). Applications of silicon (Si) have been
shown to decrease the level of coffee rust on coffee seedlings. Martinati et al. (2008) found
that the number of rust lesions on leaves of Si-treated coffee (C. arabica) seedlings was
decreased in proportion to the dosage of Si (as potassium silicate) supplied to the soil by up
to 66% compared to the control, which received no Si.
In an epidemiological study on coffee rust in Honduras, Avelino et al. (2006) reported that
the intensity of coffee rust infection was dependent on the production situation, rather than
regional differences in environmental parameters, such as rainfall levels. They showed that
coffee rust was associated with acid soils, soils treated with mineral fertilisers and increased
yields. Possibly, an acidifying effect of the mineral fertilisers was the main factor accounting
for higher levels of disease.
Anthracnose
Anthracnose diseases affect leaves, shoots and fruit of a variety of tropical perennial crops
on farms and can also create severe post-harvest problems. The Ascomycotina species,
Glomerella cingulata (anamorph: Colletotrichum gloeosporioides), an endophyte on plant species
Effect of Nutrition and Soil Function on Pathogens of Tropical Tree Crops 253
such as cocoa, Theobroma cacao (Rubini et al., 2005), is the most common causal pathogen,
infecting a number of tropical tree crops such as avocado, mango, coffee and kauri (Agathis
sp). Symptoms include blackened and sunken lesions on fruit, and marginal necrosis of
young or flush leaves. On avocado, fruit and leaves are infected by C. gloeosporioidies, the
leaves developing large light brown lesions and, in wet weather, pink spore masses.
Anthracnose is transmitted mainly by rainsplash (Kader, 2002) and heavy rainfall increases
the severity of anthracnose in Robusta coffee. Rust infections can predispose Arabica coffee
to anthracnose infection (Kohler et al., 1997). As an endophyte and facultative parasite, this
pathogen may be asymptomatic in healthy plants of some crop species, only becoming
pathogenic under conditions of stress, such as over-exposure to sun in the case of shade-
requiring crops. As with other latent species (see Prakash, 2000; Kohler et al., 1997), the
removal of dead twigs and branches before flowering is a crucial measure to control
infection by the fungus. Possibly, nutrition plays a role in the control of anthracnose.
Anthracnose in the orchid, Cymbidium sp., caused by Colletototrichum orchidacearum, for
example, was reduced by applying macronutrients, especially K and P (Yi et al., 2003).
Acosta-Ramos et al. (2003) took an integrated management approach, including soil and
foliar application of nutrients, to mango trees in an orchard in Mexico and recorded
decreases in the incidence of both anthracnose, caused by C. gloeosporioides, and stem end
rot, caused by Lasiodiplodia theobromae.
In papaya and mango, a post-harvest problem caused by anthracnose infection of the fruit is
particularly serious and can be controlled by dipping fruit in hot water or a fungicide (such
as benomyl). Anthracnose infects all parts of the mango plant: new leaf flushes are
particularly susceptible and, in wet weather, flowers are susceptible to blossom blight. In
guava, which incurs serious losses from anthracnose disease, infections may be associated
with fruit fly damage and with scab damage caused by Sphaceloma perseae (Ploetz, 2007).
Passion fruit is also a host of anthracnose. Passion fruit produced under poor growing
conditions may also be infected with Alternaria sp. causing brown spot.
was reported from Papua New Guinea (Nelson et al., 2011). Other Phytophthora species also
cause fruit rots; particularly devastating losses in cocoa in West Africa are caused by P.
megakarya, for example (Guest, 2007). Similarly devastating losses are caused in South
America by the basidiomycete, Moniliophthora roreri that causes frosty pod. A fruit rot in
cocoa is also caused by Lasiodiplodia theobromae in southern and Southeast Asia. On avocado,
the same pathogen species causes browning of the fruit from the stem end (Kohler et al.,
1997) and fruit rot in papaya (Kader, 2002). L. theobromae generally requires wounding to
initiate infection (Kader, 2002). A possible relation to plant nutrition has been raised by
studies of some Phytophthora fruit rots. For example, brown rot of citrus caused by
Phytophthora citrophthora, is enhanced under when N fertiliser is provided as ammonium-N
(Menge and Nemec, 1997).
Verticillium theobromae causes cigar end rot of banana. Sanitation (including removal of dead
flowers), canopy aeration and exposure to light are recommended management methods for
this disease (Nelson et al. 2006). A serious fruit rot of guava is caused by Pestalotiopsis
disseminate that infects the fruit from the stalk end producing white fruiting bodies that later
become brown. This disease is linked with poor nutrition; hence proper soil amendment to
improve fertility is a recommended control measure. Similarly, Pestalotiopsis sp. infection of
coconut can be reduced by improved growing conditions through the application of
fertiliser (Kohler et al., 1997). Pestaliotopsis (Fig. 1) has been isolated from cocoa leaves that
have symptoms of vascular-streak dieback possibly it is a secondary pathogen.
Fig. 1. Conidia of Pestalotiopsis sp. isolated from cocoa leaves in Sulawesi, Indonesia;
magnified x400 (authors photo).
Effect of Nutrition and Soil Function on Pathogens of Tropical Tree Crops 255
other crops, including maize, neelam and oil palm (pers. comm. Ade Rosmana, Hasanuddin
University). Possibly the change in symptoms and increased severity of the disease is the
result of an environmental factor interacting with C. theobromae infections or VSD-infected
trees have become susceptible to infection by a secondary pathogen(s); trees weakened by
stress, such as poor nutrition, might be predisposed to such a secondary infection (Mossu,
1990 cited by Schroth et al., 2000). An alternative explanation for the change in symptoms
and severity of the disease is that a new strain of the pathogen, C. theobromae, has emerged.
Further work is underway to elucidate the pathogen-environmental relationship that might
lie behind the changed VSD symptoms.
A devastating disease of cocoa is witches broom, caused by a co-evolved pathogen of cocoa,
a basidiomycete species, Moniliophthora perniciosa. The disease causes distortion of growth in
the shoots, creating a broom-like appearance. Although the pathogen co-evolved with
cocoa, it has caused most damage in plantations in Bahia, Brazil away from its centre of
origin in the Amazon rainforest. Improved management, including the appropriate use of
fertilisers, combined with the introduction of resistant cocoa genotypes has been effective in
mitigating the impact of this disease (Keane and Putter, 1992). Dieback in cocoa caused by L.
theobromae has been observed in the Cameroons (Mbenoun et al., 2008) and in India (Kannan
et al. 2010). Vascular streaking has been observed in both cases. Kannan et al. (2010) isolated
the pathogen and reinoculated seedlings, which showed disease symptoms after 20 days.
Infection by L. theobromae is facilitated by
Fig. 2. Left: Cocoa tree in Sulawesi, Indonesia infected with VSD. Right: LS of a stem of
infected cocoa showing hyphae of the causal organism, C. theobromae, in a xylem vessel,
magnified x400 (authors photos).
Various causes of mango decline have been reported. Mango decline is associated with
opportunistic fungi such as Botryosphaeria ribis, Physalospora sp. and others (see Zheng et al.,
2002). L. theobromae has also been linked to mango decline (Shahbaz et al., 2009), while a
form of mango decline in Brazil is caused by Ceratocystis fimbriata (Ploetz, 2007). Mango
decline symptoms are reported to include interveinal chlorosis in leaves, stunting and
terminal and marginal necrosis with dieback of young stems, internal softening of the fruit
and even tree death; these symptoms may be linked to Mn and Fe deficiency (Crane and
Campbell, 1994). Both Mn and Fe may be deficient in plants growing in high pH soil.
Another mango disease that has recently become a serious problems in some regions (e.g
northern Australia) is mango malformation caused by Fusarium spp., which cause distortion
in the growth of shoots and buds.
Many dieback diseases are caused by a combination of factors, including nutrient deficiency,
drought and wounding or transmission of inoculum by insects. A fungus surviving in a host
plant as an endophyte or as a saprophyte on dead tissue may switch to being a pathogen in
stressed plants (Shulz and Boyle, 2005). Nutrient deficiency could be a key predisposing
factor for this switch to occur. Generally, adequate host nutrition, as well as shade
management and sanitation (such as adequate pruning and the removal of dead twigs), are
crucial preventative measure for some forms of dieback.
and other tree crops. It is a serious pathogen of rubber trees in Malaysia. Red root disease
caused by Ganoderma philippii (syn. G. pseudoferreum) another basidiomycete, is also an
important rubber pathogen in Malaysia and India. The use of arsenic-containing sprays as a
control method for root rots creates environmental concerns. As for other root pathogens,
sanitation of areas prior to planting is a necessary control measure.
Ganoderma orbiforme (syn. G. boninense) is the most severe pathogen on oil palm in southeast
Asia (Susanto et al., 2005; Flood et al., 2005; www.dfid.gov.uk). Sanitation is particularly
important and diseased trees, including the roots, are dug out mechanically, and shredded
for composting. In a recently established trial in Sumatra, Indonesia, shredded plant
material and empty fruit bunches are being used to prepare compost using microbial
promoters, particularly Trichoderma spp., which the trial aims to test by soil application in
order to assess their effect on root rot disease (Agus Purwantara, pers. comm.). Srinivasulu
(2003) reported a higher incidence of Ganoderma spp. infection of coconut growing on sandy
and red soils (which had a low organic matter content) than on black soils (with a higher
organic matter content). Amendment of soil with calcium nitrate has been used to reduce
Ganoderma basal stem rot in coconut palms (Kandan et al., 2010). In a plot of coconut trees
affected by this disease, Kharthikaya et al. (2006) demonstrated that a combined treatment of
frequent irrigation, soil applications of neem cake, Trichoderma viride, Pseudomonas fluorescens
and a fungicide prevented the spread of the pathogen, G. lucidum, and led to the recovery of
42% of diseased palm trees.
Phytophthora spp. cause root rots in crops such as avocado and citrus. Root rot in avocado
caused by P. cinnamomi becomes particularly severe under conditions of flooding (Ploetz,
2007). Phytophthora root rot in citrus is associated with citrus leaf miner damage and
Diaprepes root weevil (Ploetz, 2007). The form of nitrogen available to citrus trees appears
to affect the severity of this disease. Root rot of citrus was shown to increase in the presence
of ammonium-N but decreased by supplying nitrate-N (Menge and Nemec, 1997). Root rots
are also caused by Rosellinia spp. on crops such as avocado, citrus and banana they are
favoured by acidic soil conditions (Ploetz, 2007).
Nematodes
Nematodes are generally favoured by coarse-textured soils that are low in organic matter
and biological activity (Desaeger et al., 2004). For example, bananas became more
susceptible to nematodes when grown in degraded soil that had lost much of its original
organic matter (Page and Bridges, 1993) and nematode attack on maize was more damaging
in unfertilised, than in fertilised plots (Desaeger et al., 2004). The intensity of crop
production can also influence nematode populations. In Costa Rica, Avelino et al. (2009)
examined the conditions that influence populations of two nematode species, Meloidogyne
exigua (root-knot nematode) and Pratylenchus coffeae colonising roots of coffee. The two
species had specific preferences of altitude and soils, with low M. exigua populations being
associated with non-sandy soils with a high K and Zn content, but high populations of both
species occurred on farms which had inter-row planting distances of less than 0.9 m,
irrespective of environmental conditions. This, the authors suggest, indicates that
intensification of coffee production provides conditions favourable for nematode
reproduction and transmission.
Nutrient supply and organic amendments can have direct impacts on nematode populations
and infection. In a guava growing area of Brazil, the numbers of juveniles of the root-knot
Effect of Nutrition and Soil Function on Pathogens of Tropical Tree Crops 259
A number of studies have been conducted reporting the isolation of potential microbial
biocontrol agents from the soils in which tropical perennials are grown. Examples are the
identification of five Trichoderma species, selected from 25 isolates from mango orchards in
Mexico, which had an inhibitory effect on the growth of Fusarium spp. in vitro (Michel-Acev
et al., 2001), the isolation of Trichoderma spp. demonstrated to have in vitro inhibitory effects
on the cocoa pathogen, Moniliophthora perniciosa (Rivas-Cordero, 2010), on Ganoderma
orbiforme (syn. G. boninense) (Siddiquee et al., 2009) and on Lasiodiplodia theobromae and
Colletotrichum musae, isolated from infected banana (Samuels, 2006; Sangeetha 2009 ). Lower
levels of disease caused by G. orbiforme in infected oil palm seedlings were recorded
following treatment of the seedlings with T. harzianum conidia (Izzati et al. 2008). Tea stems
inoculated with T. harzianum demonstrated resistance to infection by Armillaria sp. (Otieno
et al., 2003). Muleta et al. (2007) found that among isolates of rhizobacteria isolated from
soils under coffee, some Pseudomonas and Bacillus species strongly inhibited the in vitro
growth of Fusarium spp., including F. stilboides and F. oxysporum. Such rhizobacteria have
potential as biocontrol agents of coffee wilt diseases. Using an integrated approach to
management of Fusarium spp. and the citrus nematode, Tylenchulus semipenetrans, in Egypt,
Abd-Elgawad et al. (2010) showed that the application of bacterial isolates contributed to a
reduction of populations of these pathogens.
In a study of leaf spot disease of mango in Nigeria, Okigbo and Osuinde (2003)
demonstrated the pathogenicity of three fungi species isolated from the leaf lesions
(Pestalotiopsis mangiferae, Lasiodiplodia theobromae and Macrophoma mangiferae) by inoculating
them individually onto healthy mango leaves. In addition, the authors isolated a bacterium
identified as Bacillus subtilis from soil under mango trees and showed that it inhibited
growth in vitro of the three causal pathogens and also reduced disease severity in vivo when
applied to soil in the field. In tea plants infected with L. theobromae, in vivo control of the
disease was demonstrated by pre-treatment of the plants with bacteria that had been
isolated from the tea rhizosphere and shown to have in vitro antagonistic activity
(Purkayastha et al., 2010). Stirling et al. (1992) isolated fluorescent pseudomonads from
avocado soils suppressive to P. cinnamomi (causing root rot) and demonstrated their in vitro
antagonism to the pathogen. In vivo control of the root-knot nematode on coffee roots,
Meloidogyne incognita, by the application of an obligate bacterial parasite of the nematode, a
strain of Pasteuria penetrans, was demonstrated by Carneiro et al. (2007). The colonisation of
banana roots by the nematode Radopholus similis could be decreased by inoculation of the
banana plants with a non-pathogenic isolate of F. oxysporum (Paparu et al., 2008). The
authors demonstrated that inoculation of the fungus caused the up-regulation of a number
of defence-related genes in the host plant (the expression of some of these genes was also
increased by inoculation with the nematode). However, the means by which biocontrol
agents exert antagonistic effects towards pathogens may include a variety of other
mechanisms, including direct antibiosis and competition.
Role of mycorrhizae
Most plants form symbiotic associations with fungi, forming mycorrhizae. In tropical
perennial crop species such associations mainly occur with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM)
fungi, but associations with other taxonomic groups of fungi, forming ectomycorrhizae, are
also found. In fact, it could be said that, under natural conditions, plants have mycorrhizae
rather than roots (Azcon-Aguilar and Barea, 1996). Mycorrhizal fungi have an irreplaceable
role in supplying nutrients to the plants, particularly of phosphorus (P), which is often
unavailable for direct uptake by plant roots. They can also reduce disease severity,
particularly of diseases caused by soil-borne pathogens, such as nematodes, in addition to
conferring tolerance to drought and salinity (Andrade et al., 2009). Increased tolerance to
nematodes has been reported in perennial crop species inoculated with mycorrhizal fungi.
Vaast et al. (1997) reported enhanced resistance to Pratylenchus coffeae in coffee plants
inoculated with AM fungi, with fewer lesions occurring in the AM fungi-inoculated roots (see
Section 2). Similarly, an increase in resistance to nematodes was reported in banana plants that
Effect of Nutrition and Soil Function on Pathogens of Tropical Tree Crops 263
had been inoculated with mycorrhizal fungi (Elsen et al., 2003). In a study in citrus orchards in
Thailand, increased growth, P uptake and resistance to root rot caused by Phytophthora
nicotianae was shown to result from the inoculation of citrus trees with a species of AM fungus,
Glomus etunicatum, isolated from local citrus orchard (Watanarojanaporn et al., 2011). A second
AM fungus isolate, identified as Acaulospora tuberculata, also conferred resistance to P.
nicotianae disease. Mycorrhizal fungi may compete for infection sites with the pathogen
and/or they may impede access to nutrients by the pathogen (Azcon-Aquila and Barea, 1996).
6. Conclusion
Soil function, plant nutritional status and cultural management practices have a strong
influence on the incidence and severity of many diseases of tropical perennials. Diseases are
influenced, not only by the general nutritional status of the plant (i.e. by an adequate supply
of macronutrients), but also by individual nutrients. Soil pH is particularly important for a
number of reasons, including its effect on availability of cations to the plant, pathogen or
antagonists. It also influences microbial ecology, with a number of potential antagonists
among bacterial and actinomycete species being favoured by a higher soil pH. Since tropical
perennial crops and the use of inorganic fertiliser can lower soil pH, liming and/or compost
treatments are strategies that can be adopted for disease mitigation in these crops.
Composting farm waste, not only returns nutrients to the farm, but also improves farm
sanitation as it kills larvae of pests and pathogen spores and other forms of inoculum.
Nutrient elements supplied in mineral fertilisers can interact and care needs to be taken in
their application. As mentioned earlier, some fertilisers can increase concentrations of Cl in
plant tissues and decrease the K/Cl ratio. Also mentioned previously (Section 2),
applications of Mg or K in excess can reduce the uptake of other basic cations, particularly
Ca. To complement the use of soil amendments as a way to increase production and
decrease pest and pathogen damage, it is important that tropical perennial crops are
managed properly with cultural methods such as pruning, shade regulation, soil drainage
and sanitation.
7. Acknowledgement
Preparation of this review paper was supported by funding provided by the Australian
Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR).
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272 Plant Pathology
1. Introduction
Banana (Musa spp.) is the fourth most important global food commodity after rice, wheat
and maize in terms of gross value production. At present, it is grown in more than 120
countries throughout tropical and subtropical regions and it is the staple food for more than
400 million people (Molina and Valmayor, 1999). Among the production constraints, Fusarium
wilt caused by the fungus Fusarium oxysporum f.sp cubense (Foc) is the most devastating disease
affecting commercial and subsistence of banana production through out the banana producing
areas of the world (Ploetz, 2005). The disease is ranked as one of the top 6 important plant
diseases in the world (Ploetz & Pegg, 1997). In terms of crop destruction, it ranks with the few
most devastating diseases such as wheat rust and potato blight (Carefoot and sprott, 1969).
The disease almost destroyed the banana export industry, built on the Gros Michel variety, in
Central America during the 1950s (Stover, 1962). In addition, the widely grown clones in the
ABB Bluggoe and AAA Gros Michel and Cavendish sub groups are also highly susceptible
to this disease worldwide. Presently, Fusarium wilt has been reported in all banana growing
regions of the world (Asia, Africa, Australia and the tropical Americas) except some islands in
the South Pacific, the Mediterranean, Melanesia, and Somalia (Stover, 1962; Anonymous, 1977;
Ploetz and Pegg, 2000).
The fungus Foc is the soilborne hyphomycete and is one of more than 100 formae speciales
of F. oxysporum that causes vascular wilts of flowering plants (Domsch et al. 1980; Nelson et
al. 1983). Although Fusarium wilt probably originated in Southeast Asia, (Ploetz and Pegg,
1997), the disease was first discovered at Eagle Farm, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia in
1876 in banana plants var. Sugar (Silk AAB) (Bancroft, 1876). The fungus infects the roots of
banana plants, colonizing the vascular system of the rhizome and pseudostem, and inducing
characteristic wilting symptoms mostly after 5-6 months of planting and the symptoms are
expressed both externally and internally (Wardlaw, 1961; Stover, 1962). Generally, infected
plants produce no bunches and if produced, the fruits are very small and only few fingers
develop. Fruits ripen irregularly and the flesh is pithy and acidic. The fungus survives in soil
for up to 30 years as chlamydospores in infested plant material or in the roots of alternative
hosts (Ploetz, 2000).
Since the discovery of Fusarium wilt of banana, though various control strategies like soil
fumigation (Herbert and Marx, 1990); fungicides (Lakshmanan et al., 1987); crop rotation
274 Plant Pathology
(Hwang, 1985; Su et al., 1986), flood fallowing (Wardlaw, 1961; Stover, 1962) and organic
amendments (Stover, 1962) have been evolved and attempted, yet, the disease could not be
controlled effectively except by planting of resistant cultivars (Moore et al., 1999). Planting
of resistant varieties also cannot be implemented because of consumer preference
(Viljoen, 2002). Under these circumstances, use of antagonistic microbes which protect and
promote plant growth by colonizing and multiplying in both rhizosphere and plant system
could be a potential alternative approach for the management of Fusarium wilt of banana.
Besides, biological control of Fusarium wilt disease has become an increasingly popular
disease management consideration because of its environmental friendly nature which offers
a potential alternative to the use of resistant banana varieties and the discovery of novel
mechanisms of plant protection associated with certain microorganisms (Weller et al., 2002;
Fravel et al., 2003). Biological control of soil borne diseases caused especially by Fusarium
oxysporum is well documented (Marois et al., 1981; Sivan and Chet, 1986; Larkin and Fravel,
1998; Thangavelu et al., 2004). Several reports have previously demonstrated the successful use
different species of Trichoderma, Pseudomonas, Streptomyces, non pathogenic Fusarium (npFo) of
both rhizospheric and endophytic in nature against Fusarium wilt disease under both glass
house and field conditions (Lemanceau & Alabouvette, 1991; Alabouvette et al.1993; Larkin &
Fravel, 1998; Weller et al. 2002; Sivamani and Gnanamanickam, 1988; Thangavelu et al. 2001;
Rajappan et al. 2002; Getha et al. 2005). The details on the effect of these biocontrol agents in
controlling Fusarium wilt disease of banana are discussed in detail hereunder.
2. Trichoderma spp.
Trichoderma spp., are free-living fungi that are common in soil and root ecosystems. They are
highly interactive in root, soil and foliar environments. They produce or release a variety of
compounds that induce localized or systemic resistance responses in plants. This fungal bio-
control agent has long been recognized as biological agents, for the control of plant disease
and for their ability to increase root growth and development, crop productivity, resistance to
abiotic stresses, and uptake and use of nutrients. It can be efficiently used as spores (especially,
conidia), which are more tolerant to adverse environmental conditions during product
formulation and field use, in contrast to their mycelial and chlamydospore forms as microbial
propagules (Amsellem et al. 1999). However, the presence of a mycelial mass is also a key
component for the production of antagonistic metabolites (Benhamou and Chet 1993; Yedidia
et al. 2000). Several reports indicate that Trichoderma species can effectively suppress Fusarium
wilt pathogens (Sivan and Chet, 1986; Thangavelu et al. 2004). Thangavelu (2002) reported that
application of T. harzianum Th-10, as dried banana leaf formulation @ 10 g/plant containing
4X1031 cfu/g in basal + top dressing on 2, 4 and 6 months after planting in cv. Rasthali
recorded the highest reduction of disease incidence (51.16%) followed by Bacillus subtilis or
Pseudomonas fluorescens (41.17%) applications as talc based formulation under both glass house
and field conditions. The talc based formulation of T. harzianum Th-10 and fungicide treatment
recorded only 40.1% and 18.1% reduction of the disease respectively compared to control. In
the Fusarium wilt-nematode interaction system also, soil application of biocontrol agents
reduced significantly the wilt incidence and also the root lesion and root knot index. In
addition to this, 50 to 82% of reduction in nematode population viz., Pratylenchus coffeae and
Meloidogyne incognita was also noted due to application of bioagents and the maximum
reduction was due to T. harzianum treatment (Thangavelu, 2002). Raghuchander et al. (1997)
Current Advances in the Fusarium Wilt Disease
Management in Banana with Emphasis on Biological Control 275
reported that T. viride and P. fluorescens were equally effective in reducing the wilt incidence.
Inoculation of potted abaca plants with Trichoderma viride and yeast showed 81.76% and
82.52% reduction of wilt disease severity respectively in the antagonist treated plants. (Bastasa
and Baliad, 2005).
Similarly, soil application of T. viride NRCB1 as chaffy grain formulation significantly
reduced the external (up to 78%) and internal symptoms (up to 80 %) of Fusarium wilt
disease in tissue cultured as well as sucker derived plants of banana cv. Rasthali (Silk-AAB)
and increased the plant growth parameters significantly as compared to the talc powder
formulation under pot culture and field conditions (Thangavelu and Mustaffa, 2010).
The possible mechanisms involved in the reduction of Fusarium wilt severity due to
Trichoderma spp. treatment might be the mycoparasitism, spatial and nutrient competition,
antibiosis by enzymes and secondary metabolites, and induction of plant defence system.
The mycoparasitism involves in coiling, disorganization of host cell contents and
penetration of the host (Papavisas, 1985; University of Sydney, 2003). During the
mycoparasitism, Trichoderma spp. parasitizes the hyphae of the pathogen and produce
extracellular enzymes such as proteolytic enzymes, -1, 3- glucanolytic enzymes and
chitinase etc., which cause lysis of the pathogen. The toxic metabolites such as extracellular
enzymes, volatiles and antibiotics like gliotoxin and viridin which are highly fungistatic
substances (Weindling, 1941) are considered as elements involved in antibiosis. In addition,
Trichoderma spp. could compete and sequester ions of iron (the ions are essential for the plant
pathogen,) by releasing compounds known as siderophores (Srinivasan et al. 1992). There are
several reports demonstrating control of a wide range of plant pathogens including Fusarium
spp. by Trichoderma spp. by elicitation of induced systemic or localized resistance which occur
due to the interaction of bioactive molecules such as proteins avr-like proteins and cell wall
fragments released by the action of extracellular enzymes during mycoparasitic reaction.
Thangavelu and Musataffa, (2010) reported that the application of T. viride NRCB1 as rice
chaffy grain formulation and challenge inoculation with Foc in cv. Rasthali resulted in the
induction of defense related enzymes such as Peroxidase and Penylalanine Ammonia lyase
(PAL) and also the total phenolic content significantly higher (>50%) as compared to control
and Foc alone inoculated banana plants and the induction was maximum at 4-6th day after
treatment. They suggested that this increased activities of these lytic enzymes and thus
increased content of phenols in the T. viride applied plants might have induced resistance
against Foc by either making physical barrier stronger or chemically impervious to the
hydrolytic enzymes produced by the pathogen (Thangavelu and Mustaffa, 2010). Morpurgo
et al. (1994) reported that the activity of peroxidase was at least five times higher in the roots
and corm tissues of Foc resistant banana variety than in the susceptible variety. Inoculation of
resistant plants with Foc resulted in 10-fold increase in PO activity after seven days of
inoculation, whereas the susceptible variety exhibited only a slight increase in PO activity.
3. Pseudomonas spp.
Pseudomonas spp. are particularly suitable for application as agricultural biocontrol agents
since they can use many exudates compounds as a nutrient source (Lugtenberg et al.1999a);
abundantly present in natural soils, particularly on plant root systems, (Sands & Rovira,
1971); high growth rate, possess diverse mechanisms of actions towards phytopathogens
276 Plant Pathology
including the production of a wide range of antagonistic metabolites (Lugtenberg et al. 1991;
Dowling & OGara, 1994; Dunlap et al.1996; Lugtenberg et al., 1999b), easy to grow in vitro
and subsequently can be reintroduced into the rhizosphere (Lugtenberg et al. 1994; Rhodes
& Powell, 1994) and capable of inducing a systemic resistance to pathogens (van Loon et al .
1998; Pieterse et al. 2001).
Several studies have investigated the ability of P. fluorescens to suppress Fusarium wilt
disease of banana. Fluorescent pseudomonad species such as Pseudomonas fluorescens
(Sakthivel and Gnanamanickam 1987), Pseudomonas putida (de Freitas and Germida 1991),
Pseudomonas chlororaphis (Chin-A-Woeng et al. 1998) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Anjaiah et
al. 2003) have been used to suppress pathogens as well as to promote growth and yield in
many crop plants. Sivamani and Gnanamanickam (1988) reported that the seedlings of Musa
balbisiana treated with P.fluorescens showed less severe wilting and internal discoloration
due to Foc infection in green house experiments. The bacterized seedlings also showed
better root growth and enhanced plant height.
Thangavelu et al. (2001) demonstrated that P. fluorescens strain pf10, which was isolated
from the rhizosphere of banana roots, was able to detoxify the fusaric acid produced by Foc
race-1 and reduced wilt incidence by 50%. Dipping of suckers in the suspension of P.
fluorescens along with the application of 500 g of wheat bran and saw dust inoculation (1: 3)
of the respective bio-control agent effectively reduced Fusarium wilt incidence in banana
(Raghuchander et al.1997). Rajappan et al. (2002) reported that the talc based powder
formulation of P. fluorescens strain pf1 was effective against Foc in the field. Pseudomonas
fluorescens strain WCS 417, known for its ability to suppress other Fusarium wilt diseases,
reduced the disease incidence by 87 4% in Cavendish bananas in glasshouse trials (Nel et al.
2006). Saravanan et al. (2003) demonstrated that either basal application of neem cake at 0.5
kg/plant + sucker dipping in spore suspension of P. fluorescens for 15 min+ soil application
of P. fluorescens at 10 g/plant at 3,5 and 7 months after planting or the basal application of
neem cake at 0.5 kg/plant + soil application of P. fluorescens at 10 g/plant at 3, 5 and 7
months after planting showed the greatest suppression of wilt disease in two field trials
conducted in Tamil Nadu, India.
Fishal et al. (2010) assessed the ability of two endophytic bacteria originally isolated from
healthy oil palm roots, Pseudomonas sp. (UPMP3) and Burkholderia sp. (UPMB3) to induce
resistance in susceptible Berangan banana against Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense race 4
(FocR4) under glasshouse conditions. The study showed that pre-inoculation of banana
plants with Pseudomonas sp UPMP3 recorded 51% reduction of Fusarium wilt disease
severity, whereas, the combined application of UPMP3+UPMB3 and single application of
UPMB3 alone recorded only 39 and 38% reduction of Fusarium wilt disease severity
respectively. Ting et al. (2011) reported that among six endobacteria isolates, only two
isolates (Herbaspirillum spp and Pseudomonas spp.) produced volatile compounds which
were capable of inhibiting the growth of Foc race 4. The compounds were identified as 2-
pentane 3-methyl, methanethiol and 3-undecene. They found that the isolate Herbaspirillum
spp. recorded 20.3% inhibition of growth of Foc race 4 as its volatile compounds contained
all the three compounds whereas Pseudomonas isolate AVA02 recorded only 1.4% of growth
inhibition of race 4 Foc as its volatile compounds contained only methanethiol and 3-
undecene. They concluded that the presence of all these three compounds especially 2-
pentane 3-methyl and also in high quantity is very important for the antifungal activity
Current Advances in the Fusarium Wilt Disease
Management in Banana with Emphasis on Biological Control 277
against Foc. Of the 56 fluorescent pseudomonad isolates obtained from banana rhizosphere,
Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain FP10 displayed the most potent antibiosis towards the Foc.
This strain was found to produce IAA, siderophores and phosphate-solubilizing enzyme
which indicated that this strain is having potential of plant-growth-promoting ability. The
presence of DAPG gene (ph1D) in the strain FP10 was confirmed by PCR and the
production of DAPG was confirmed by TLC, HPLC and FT-IR analyses. The in-vivo bioassay
carried out showed that the banana plants received with pathogen and the strain FP10
exhibited increased height (30.69cm) and reduced vascular discolouration (24.49%),
whereas, the pathogen Foc alone-inoculated plants had an average height of 21.81 cm and
98.76% vascular discolouration (Ayyadurai et al. 2006).
Saravanan and Muthusamy (2006) reported that soil application of talc-based formulation of P.
fluorescens at 15 g/plant in banana, suppressed Fusarium wilt disease significantly (30.20 VDI)
as compared to pathogen Foc alone-inoculated plants (88.89 VDI). It was found that the ability
of P. fluorescens to suppress Fusarium wilt pathogens depends on their ability to produce
antibiotic metabolites particularly 2, 4- Diacetylphloroglucinol (DAPG). The metabolite DAPG
extracted from the rhizosphere of P. fluorescens applied to soil showed significant inhibition of
growth and spore germination of Foc. They also showed that the quantity of DPAG production
was less in the extracts of soil, inoculated with P. fluorescens and challenge inoculated with F.
oxysporum f. sp. cubense as compared to P. fluorescens alone inoculated soil.
In plants pretreated with P. fluorescens and challenged with pathogen Foc, there was reduction
in the number of Foc colonies (14 numbers) as compared to the plants treated with Foc alone
(41 number). A 72% reduction in the pathogen infection was noticed as a result of P.fluorescens
treatment. Colonies of P.fluorescens in plants challenged with F. oxysporum were reduced to 33
in number, perhaps due to competition for infection loci (Sukhada et al. 2004). Electron
microscopic studies revealed that in the root samples of bacteria treated and pathogen
challenge inoculated plants, there was extensive fungal proliferation in the cortex and had wall
appositions made of electron-dense materials lining the host cortical cell wall. The wall
appositions formed were highly significant in restricting the further growth of the fungus.
They opined that electron-dense materials might have been produced either by the bacteria or
the host tissue in response to the attacking pathogen. Massive depositions of unusual
structures at sites of fungal entry was also noticed, which clearly indicated that bacterized root
cells were signalled to mobilize a number of defence structures for preventing the spread of
pathogen in the tissue (Sukhada et al. 2004). Pre-inoculated P. fluorescens helped the banana
plant to resist pathogen attack to some extent due to the structural modification of the root
system and due to the accumulation of newly formed electron-dense molecules, which may be
providing the defense mechanism to the host plant. Treatment of Ma banana (Musa spp.;
group ABB) with endophytic diazotrophic bacteria Herbaspirillum (BA234) and Burkholderia
(AB202) also resulted in significant reduction of Foc unit propagules as well as increase in
biomass of the plant in four and two months after plant inoculation with AB202 and BA234
respectively suggesting that these endophytic diazotrophic bacteria may be used as potential
bio-fertilizer and bio-control agents for banana (Weber et al. 2007).
4. Bacillus spp.
Bacillus subtilis has been identified as a potential biological control agent. These strains could
produce a wide range of antifungal compounds, such as subtilin, TasA, subtilosin, bacilysin,
278 Plant Pathology
mycobacillin and some enzymes, which can degrade fungal cell wall (Berg et al. 2001). It
was suggested that these antibiotic production plays a major role in plant disease
suppression (Knox et al. 2000; Leelasuphakul et al. 2006). In addition, some antagonistic
mechanisms of these Bacillus species involves in the competition for nutrients and space, the
induction of plant resistance, etc. (Guerra-Cantera et al., 2005; Van loon et al., 1998).
Sun et al. (2011) isolated an antagonistic Bacillus strain, KY-21 from the soil of bananas
rhizosphere and tested against Foc both under in-vitro and in-vivo conditions. Under lab
condition, mycelium growth of the pathogen was seriously inhibited after treatment with
the fermentation filtrate of KY-21. The microscopic examination of mycelium revealed that
the tips of the hypha were deformed into spherical structures that were remarkably constricted
by dual culture. Besides, the inoculation of banana plants with Bacillus strain, KY-21 also
increased the activities of polyphenol oxidase (PPO) and peroxidase (POD) significantly
compared to control. The in-vivo biocontrol assays showed that at 60 days after Foc inoculation,
the plantlets treated with KY-21 exhibited 35% severe wilt symptom and 18.3% severe vascular
discoloration as against 68.4% and 48.3% of severe wilt symptom and severe vascular
discoloration respectively in control plantlets. Besides, plantlets inoculated with KY-21 showed
significantly reduced development of disease as compared to the control.
5. Actinomycetes
Actinomycetes particularly Streptomyces spp. are important soil dwelling microorganisms,
generally saprophytic, spend majority of their life cycle as spores and are best known for
their ability to produce antibiotics. They may influence plant growth and protect plant roots
against invasion by root pathogenic fungi (Crawford et al. 1993). Streptomyces species have
been used extensively in the biological control of several formae speciales of F. oxysporum,
which caused wilt disease in many plant species (Reddi and Rao 1971; Lahdenpera and Oy,
1987; Smith et al. 1990). Streptomyces violaceusniger strain G10 isolated from a coastal
mangrove (Rhizophora apiculata (Blume)] stand, was shown to exhibit strong in-vitro
antagonism toward several plant pathogenic fungi including Foc race 4. Under in-vivo
bioassay, treating the planting hole and roots of tissue-culture-derived Novaria banana
plantlets with Streptomyces sp. strain g10 suspension (108 cfu/ml), resulted in 47% reduction
of leaf symptom index (LSI) and 53% of rhizome discoloration index (RDI) with reduced
wilt severity when the plantlets were inoculated with 104 spores/ml Foc race 4 compared to
untreated plantlets. However, the reduction in disease severity was not significant when
plantlets were inoculated with a higher concentration (106 spores/ml) of Foc race 4 (Getha et
al. 2005). Getha and Vikineswary (2002) studied the interaction between Streptomyces
violaceusniger strain g10 and F. oxysporum f.sp. cubense and demonstrated the production of
antifungal metabolites especially antibiotics by the antagonists which caused swelling,
distortion, excessive branching and lysis of hyphae and inhibition of spore germination of
Foc pathogen by the antagonist.
Among 242 actinomycete strains, isolated from the interior of leaves and roots of healthy
and wilting banana plants, Streptomyces griseorubiginosus-like strains were the most
frequently encountered strains. The screening of these strains for antagonistic activity
against Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense revealed that 50% of the Streptomyces strains
isolated from healthy trees especially from the roots had antagonistic activities against Foc
and only 27% of strains isolated from wilting trees showed the same activity (Cao et al.
Current Advances in the Fusarium Wilt Disease
Management in Banana with Emphasis on Biological Control 279
2004). Similarly in 2005, out of 131 endophytic actinomycete strains isolated from banana
roots, the most frequently isolated and siderophore producing endophytic Streptomyces sp.
strain S96 was found to be highly antagonistic to Foc. The subsequent in vivo biocontrol
assays carried out showed that the disease severity index of Fusarium wilt was significantly
reduced and mean fresh weight of plantlets increased compared to those grown in the
absence of the biocontrol strain S96 (Cao et al. 2005).
The modes of actions of non- pathogenic Fusarium isolates suggested commonly are:
competition for nutrients (Couteaudier and Alabouvette, 1990), competition for infection
sites at the root surface or inside the roots (Fravel et al. 2003) production of secondary
metabolites, which cause antibiosis and antixenosis and induced resistance (Clay, 1991;
Dubois et al. 2006). Some endophytes with growth promoting properties are also useful in
enhancing tolerance to diseases by growth promotion (Ting et al. 2009).
Although the non-pathogenic Fusarium isolates are useful in controlling the Fusarium wilt
disease, the main concern are: i) whether the biocontrol agent is truly nonpathogenic, ii)
whether it may be pathogenic on a species of plant on which it has not yet been tested and
iii) whether the biocontrol agent could become pathogenic in the future.
Fusarium wilt has been reported in many regions of the world. Although the suppression
has generally been shown to be due to soil physical structure (type of soil, drainage
condition, presence of montmorillonoid soils and pH) nutritional status and microbial
composition (Fungi, bacteria and Actinomycetes) and biological factors also said to play a
major role (Scher and Baker, 1982; Alabouvette et al. 1993). Biological control of Fusarium
wilts of numerous crops by application of antagonistic fungi and bacteria isolated from
suppressive soils has been accomplished during the last two decades all over the world
(Leeman et al., 1996; Lemanceau et al., 1992; Park et al., 1988; Raaijmakers et al., 1995). Most
of the studies have found that non-pathogenic strains of F. oxysporum are associated with the
natural suppressiveness of soil to Fusarium wilt diseases (Smith and Snyder, 1971;
Alabouvette, 1990; Postma & Rattink, 1992). These npFo colonize the plant rhizosphere and
roots without inducing any symptoms in the plants (Olivain and Alabouvette, 1997). Nel et
al. (2006) evaluated the ability of non-pathogenic F. oxysporum and Trichoderma isolates from
suppressive soils in South Africa to suppress Fusarium wilt of banana in the glasshouse. The
results revealed that only npFo isolates CAV 255 and CAV 241, reduced Fusarium wilt
incidence by 874 and 750%, respectively. Smith et al. (1999) proposed that application of
biocontrol agents isolated from banana roots grown in Fusarium wilt suppressive soil of
tissue culture plantlets in the nursery. By application of these biocontrol agents, the banana
roots had a better chance of protection against Foc. Generally, the microbial activity in
suppressive soil is influenced by type of clay minerals present in the soil. In tropical
America, a close relationship was found between suppression of Fusarium wilt and
presence of clay (montmorillonoid type) soils, where as in the Canary Islands, suppression
was associated with host mineral nutrition (Ploetz, 2000).
kg/plant + soil application of P. fluorescens at 10 g/plant at 3,5 and 7 months after planting.
They also reported that Trichoderma viride applied as soil or sucker dipping or their
combinations or along with the neem cake also had a significant reduction in disease index,
but less than that of P. fluorescens. Raghuchander et al. (1997) reported that dipping of
suckers in the suspension of T.viride along with application of 500 g of wheat bran and saw
dust inoculation (1: 3) of the respective bio control agent effectively reduced Fusarium wilt
incidence in banana. Kidane and Laing (2010) developed integrated method of controlling
Fusarium wilt by integrating biological and agronomic control methods. Single and
combined applications of non-pathogenic, endophytic Fusarium oxysporum N16 strain by
dipping their roots in a spore suspension containing 107 cfu ml-1, Trichoderma harzianum Eco-
T (Plant Health Products (Pty) Ltd. KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa) @ 4L-pt at a
concentration of 105 conidia ml-1 at the time of planting, monthly application of plants with 4
L of silicon solution per plant containing 900mg silicon L-1 and placing coarse macademia
husks at the bottom of banana plants as mulching were tested against F. oxysporum f. sp.
cubense on bananas under greenhouse and field conditions. The results showed that
treatments involving combinations of nonpathogenic F. oxysporum, T. harzianum Eco-T,
silicon and mulch had significantly higher number of leaves, stem height and girth size than
single applications of the treatments. They found that the mulching increased the growth
of feeder roots and created a conducive microenvironment, thereby increased the
microbial activity in the soil. The combined application of non-pathogenic Fusarium strain
along with silicon also resulted in reduction of corm disease index by more than 50% and
shoot yellowing and wilting by 80%. Therefore, integration of biocontrol with agronomic
practices improved the efficacy of the biocontrol organisms and the health of the host
plants. Recently Zhang et al. (2011) evaluated the effects of novel bio-fertilizers, which
combined an amino acid fertilizer and mature pig manure compost with the antagonists
Paenibacillus polymyxa SQR21, Trichoderma harzianum T37 and Bacillus subtilis N11 (isolated
from the healthy banana roots) in a severely Fusarium wilt diseased field for the
suppression of Fusarium wilt of banana as pot experiments. The results showed that the
bio-organic fertilizers which contained the bio-agents significantly suppressed the
incidence of wilt disease (by 6482%), compared to the control. The best biocontrol effect
was obtained in the treatment with the BIO2 that contains Bacillus subtilis N11. The reason
for more effect might be due to the application of the antagonists in combination with
suitable organic amendments.
Botanical fungicides are also gaining momentum as these are considered as an alternative
source for chemicals in the management of soil borne pathogens. The active principles
present in both bio-agents and botanicals may either act on the pathogen directly or induce
systemic resistance in the host plants resulting in reduction of disease development (Paul
and Sharma, 2002). Akila et al. (2011) tested two botanical fungicides from Datura metel-
Wanis 20 EC and Damet 50 EC along with Pseudomonas fluorescens, Pf1 and Bacillus subtilis,
TRC 54 individually and in combination for the management of Fusarium wilt under
greenhouse and field conditions. Combined application of botanical formulation and
biocontrol agents (Wanis 20 EC + Pf1 + TRC 54) reduced the wilt incidence significantly
under greenhouse (64%) and field conditions (75%). The reduction in disease incidence was
positively correlated with the induction of defense-related enzymes peroxidase and
polyphenol oxidase.
Current Advances in the Fusarium Wilt Disease
Management in Banana with Emphasis on Biological Control 285
Table 1. Summary of Bio-control agents used in the management of Fusarium wilt disease of
banana with their mode of action.
286 Plant Pathology
B
Current Advances in the Fusarium Wilt Disease
Management in Banana with Emphasis on Biological Control 287
D
Fig. 1. A) External symptoms (yellowing and buckling of leaves) of Fusarium wilt infected
banana plant. B) Brown vascular discoloration in the Pseudostem C) Brown vascular
discoloration in the corm of Fusarium wilt infected plant D) Microscopic view of both macro
and micro conidia of Foc.
11. Conclusion
Although several biocontrol agents including botanicals have been tried against Fusarium
wilt disease, still this lethal disease could not be controlled completely. Besides most of the
biocontrol experiments were conducted either under lab condition or green house
conditions and only in few cases, field experiments were conducted. Therefore, most of the
bioagents tested against Fusarium wilt of banana have not yet registered and reached the
end users ie. banana growers. This is mainly because of lack of confidence on the efficacy
and consistency of the bioagents in controlling the disease. Therefore, for evolving
consistent and effective biological control methods for the management of Fusarium wilt
disease are i) the Foc pathogen present in a particular area or country must be characterized
thoroughly up to VCG level and the bio-agents isolated must be screened under both in vitro
288 Plant Pathology
and in vivo conditions ii) the bio-agents having multiple mode of actions and functions
should be selected rather than selecting bioagents with one or two mode of actions. In
addition, mixture of bioagents of different genera or mixture of fungal and bacterial
bioagents along with or without fungicides or botanicals have to be tried to improve the
level and extent of disease control under different environmental and soil conditions iii) the
compatibility between bioagents or tolerance of bioagents to chemicals or botanicals must be
tested, iv) suitable method of mass production and delivery system which support more
number of propagules and long shelf life, easy to prepare and adopt must be selected, v)
mass produced bioagents should be applied at right quantity (the initial inoculum level of
bioagents should be more than the inoculum level of the pathogen) at the right place (at the
soil around the rhizosphere) at the right time (before planting or at the time of planting and
also at 2nd and 4th month after planting as booster application) and at the appropriate
physiological state, vi) mass production and delivery system should be compatible with the
production system of banana, vii) application of bioagents with other organic amendments
which can support the survival and multiplication of bio-agents and vii) integration of
biological control with other cultural or agronomic practices so that the Fusarium wilt
disease can be controlled effectively.
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12
1. Introduction
Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. savastanoi (Gardan et al., 1992) (hereafter Psv, according to Vivian
& Mansfield (1993)) is the causal agent of olive knot disease. It is considered one of the most
serious diseases affecting olive trees (Olea europaea L.) in most olive growing regions
worldwide and mainly in Mediterranean countries, where this crop has been growing for
centuries. The disease can lead to severe damage in olive groves, causing serious losses in
terms of production. This is probably the first disease clearly described in antiquity by
Theophrastus (370-286 BC) (Iacobellis, 2001) and its bacterial etiology was known through
the work of Savastano since 1887 (Smith & Rorer, 1904). However, there are currently many
unknown facts about the epidemiology of this disease or its chemical control. Here we
describe the most relevant studies performed on the epidemiology and chemical control of
olive knot.
2. Biology of infection
Psv causes the formation of hyperplastic growth in olive trees, producing spherical knots
on the trunk and branches, and less frequently on leaves and fruits (Sisto & Iacobellis,
1999; Smith, 1920). See details in figure 1. Psv infections in fresh wounds of olive trees
start with a small cavity caused by the collapse of adjoining plant cells and are more
frequent on trunks and branches, and rare on leaves and fruits. Subsequently, a
proliferation of tissue follows the periphery of the cavity resulting in knot development
(Smith, 1920; Surico, 1977). Tumor development is dependent on bacterial production of
phytohormones indoleacetic acid and cytokinins (Comai & Kosuge, 1980; Iacobellis et al.,
1994; Rodrguez-Moreno et al., 2008; Smidt & Kosuge, 1978; Surico et al., 1985). Besides,
recent results have revealed that Psv strains contain two copies of all the genes involved
in indoleacetic acid synthesis (Matas et al., 2009; Prez-Martnez et al., 2008). It has been
300 Plant Pathology
reported that olive knots are also dependent on the hrp/hrc genes (Sisto et al., 2004), which
encode the biosynthesis of a functional Type III Secretion System (TTSS). Recently,
remarkable progress has been made in research into several aspects of the host-pathogen
interaction of the causal agent of olive knot (Prez-Martnez et al., 2008; Matas, 2010;
Prez-Martnez et al., 2010). Several putative virulence factors in Psv have been identified,
including TTSS protein effectors and a variety of genes encoding known P. syringae
virulence determinants (Prez-Martnez et al., 2008). Analyses of TTSS protein effectors of
Psv have recently shed light on the role of TTSS in pathogenicity and host range (Matas,
2010; Prez-Martnez et al., 2010).
Fig. 1. Typical olive knot symptoms caused by Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. savastanoi on twigs
(upper left), leaf (upper right), branches (lower left) and fruits (lower right).
Anatomical studies of knots have been performed in olive (Smith, 1920; Surico, 1977),
oleander (Wilson & Magie, 1964; Wilson, 1965) and more recently, in buckthorn (Temsah et
al., 2007a) and myrtle (Temsah et al., 2007b) by light microscopy. Rodrguez-Moreno et al.
(2009) performed the first real-time monitoring of Psv disease development and the first
illustrated description of the ultrastructure of Psv induced knots. They examined knot
sections using a green fluorescent protein tagging a Psv strain, coupled with epifluorescence
microscopy and scanning confocal electron microscopy. Additionally, scanning and TEM
(transmission electron microscopy) were used for a detailed ultrastructural analysis within
knot tissues (Rodrguez-Moreno et al., 2009).
Infection by Psv and subsequent knot formation in young twigs of oleander (Nerium
oleander) requires vascular cambium activity (Wilson, 1965). The host invasion by the
bacterium begins with the colonization of the infection site, followed by the disintegration
and breakdown of adjacent plant cells that results in the formation of a large cavity around
the area colonized by the bacteria. Curiously, this bacterium produces cell wall degrading
enzymes in vitro such as cellulase, cellobiase, xylanase and peptinase (Magie, 1963). In a
Epidemiology and Control of Plant Diseases Caused by Phytopathogenic Bacteria:
The Case of Olive Knot Disease Caused by Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. savastanoi 301
second phase, intact cells surrounding the pathogen suffer the effect of the hormones that
Psv produces and increase in size (hypertrophy) followed by an abnormal cell division
(hyperplasia). Finally, there is a differentiation of certain cells of the hyperplastic area,
elements of xylem and phloem.
During infection of young olive stems after inoculation, the bacteria multiply by a
succession of phases which include a population increase, a stationary phase and a
population decline. There is a clear parabolic trend whose maximum value depends on
cultivar susceptibility (Varvaro & Surico, 1978). Pathogen multiplication inside tissues of
micropropagated olive plants can reach densities of 107 to 108 cfu/ knot (Rodrguez-Moreno
et al., 2008), values very similar to those previously described with 1-2 years old seedlings
by Penyalver et al. (2006). The first reaction of tissue from the inoculated slit of a young stem
is to renew or quickly increase cambium activity, although this depends on whether the
inoculation takes place in winter, summer or spring (Surico, 1977). The increased activity of
the cambium promotes the formation of two new tissue masses on both sides of the wound,
which grow until their junction and form a knot. Differentiation of phloem and xylem
elements, which are organized or not in vascular bundles, occurs within the new
parenchyma tissue. Light microscopy shows the presence of vascular bundles of new
formation in olive knots, connected with the stem vascular cylinder (Rodrguez-Moreno et
al., 2009). Psv has been located in cavities formed after the collapse of intercellular plant
cells, as well as in peripheral areas close to the epidermis or invading the newly formed
xylem bundles (Rodrguez-Moreno et al., 2009). This could be related to the spread of the
pathogen and its external output through plant exudates. Formation of bacterial aggregates,
microcolonies and multilayer biofilms has been observed in knot sections by scanning
electron microscopy. Besides, TEM analysis of knot sections shows the release of outer
membrane vesicles from the pathogen surface (Rodrguez-Moreno et al., 2009).
Subsequently, in old knots, plant cells collapse and form cavities containing large numbers of
bacteria. Fisures reaching the knot surface develop inside these cavities, allowing bacteria to
escape to the external surface of intact knots (Surico, 1977). However, it remains unclear how
knot formation in the host benefits Psv. Knots may represent a favorable environment for
bacteria to multiply and also protect them against extreme environmental conditions, such as
the usually dry and hot summers of the olive-growing areas (Comai & Kosuge, 1980).
The causative agent of olive knot disease is not the only organism living in knots, because
there are also white or yellow saprophytic bacteria characterized as Pantoea agglomerans
(Garca de los Ros, 1989), other species of enterobacteria and even putative human
pathogenic bacteria (Ouzari et al., 2008). The etiologic agent of olive knot disease has only
been isolated from 5 to 10% of olive knots, similarly to that observed in other Psv hosts
species, such as oleander and ash (Garca de los Ros, 1989). Four new bacterial species
belonging to the genus Pantoea were proposed in a study of endophytic bacteria from olive
knots associated to Psv (Rojas, 1999) and one of them known as Erwinia toletana has been
accepted as new species (Rojas et al., 2004). These bacteria would be incorporated to the knot
subsequently to the infection caused by the etiologic agent, according to Garca de los Ros
(1989). Indeed, a symbiotic relationship may exist between Psv and Pantoea (or may be other
bacteria) because they are found together not only in knots but also as epiphytic bacteria in
infected plants (Ercolani, 1978, 1991; Quesada et al., 2007). Furthermore, preliminary tests
have shown that strains of an uncharacterized Erwinia, isolated from Psv-related olive
302 Plant Pathology
knots, could have a synergistic effect with Psv in the development of typical symptoms of
olive knot disease (Fernandes & Marcelo, 2002). Similar results have been reported in
olive trees coinoculated with strains of Psv and P. agglomerans, which produced larger
knots than inoculations with Psv strains alone and this effect could be due to auxin
production by P. agglomerans (Marchi et al., 2006).
(Ercolani, 1971, 1978, 1979, 1983, 1985, 1991, 1993) and southeastern Spain (Quesada et al.,
2007; Quesada et al., 2010a; 2010b). In the aforementioned studies, epiphytic Psv
populations in the phyllosphere of olive trees were estimated by washing, followed by
plating serial dilution of the washings.
Microbial communities of the olive tree phylloplane can grow embedded in a matrix of
exopolysaccharides and form biofilms adhered to the leaf surface (Morris et al., 1997).
Furthermore, a great diversity of pigmented bacteria colonizing the surface of olive tree was
observed by washing olive leaves and plating the washings. In Italy, Ercolani collected
bacteria from the leaf surfaces of olive trees for two sampling periods over several years in
the 70s and 80s (Ercolani, 1978, 1991). Phenotypic characterization of these isolates allowed
Ercolani to record over 20 bacterial species colonizing the leaf surface. The three highest
frequency values of occurrence corresponded to Psv, Xanthomonas campestris and Pantoea
agglomerans with 51, 6.7 and 6%, respectively (Ercolani, 1991).
Spanish studies found that averages of the total bacterial population from leaves and stems
were generally significantly higher in Psv-inoculated than in non-inoculated olive trees,
suggesting that Psv might have a positive effect on the growth of other epiphytic bacteria or
on their ability to colonize olive organs (Quesada et al., 2010a). Populations of P. agglomerans
could accompany Psv and contribute to the significant differences in total bacterial
populations between inoculated and non-inoculated olive trees. Besides, there was a
positive correlation between Psv and yellow P. agglomerans either on stems or leaf surfaces
of naturally infected olive trees (Quesada et al., 2007), and a similar fluctuation of both
bacterial populations on the same host. This is of interest because both bacteria produce
indoleacetic acid and this can contribute to the epiphytic fitness of Psv in olive trees
(Varvaro & Martella, 1993).
The bacterial community composition on the surface of olive leaves is more strongly
influenced by the sampling season than by leaf age (Ercolani, 1991). The diversity and size
of the total bacterial populations within the olive phyllosphere were lower during the hot
dry months and higher during the cold rainy months (Ercolani, 1991). Our observations on
one olive orchard showed that seasonal fluctuations of Psv populations felt into the
pattern of seasonal shifts described above (Quesada et al., 2007). Interestingly, Psv
population sizes in stems and leaf surfaces were correlated (with r2 values of 0.7 and 0.43,
respectively) with rainfall, temperature and relative humidity (Quesada et al., 2007).
Therefore, these climatic parameters may exert a more or less strong influence on the Psv
population values. Epiphytic bacterial communities on olive leaves were more uniform in
mature leaves than in young leaves (Ercolani, 1991). In addition, the olive phyllosphere
apparently selects specific genotypes of the bacterial community (Lindow & Brandl, 2003).
This gives us an idea of the great variability, in terms of epiphytic populations, existing
among leaves of the same tree.
Over 50% of bacterial isolates collected from olive leaves by Ercolani (1978, 1991) were
identified as Psv and this bacterium survived and multiplied on the leaf surfaces of olive
trees (Varvaro & Ferrulli, 1983). Abu-Ghorrah (1988) observed maximum Psv population
levels of about 107 cfu/cm2 in olive trees and the Psv generation time in this host was 24 to
36 hours. In studies of leaves inoculated by spraying a suspension of Psv, the bacteria
304 Plant Pathology
colonized the lower leaf surface better than the upper surface (Surico, 1993). Basically, they
sticked to the vein depressions and to specific structures such as the shields of pectate hairs
(Surico, 1993).
The seasonal fluctuation of Psv populations on olive leaves in Italy, recorded over three
consecutive years by Ercolani (1971, 1978), showed that Psv populations were higher in
spring and fall (about 104 cfu/cm2 of leaf) than in winter and summer (about 102-103
cfu/cm2) (Ercolani, 1971, 1978; Varvaro & Surico, 1978). Psv populations on olive leaves in
Spain, also recorded over three consecutive years, reached the highest (ca. 103-104 cfu/cm2 of
leaf) densities mainly in warm and rainy months (mainly spring season) and the lowest (ca.
0-10 cfu/cm2 of leaf) in hot and dry months (summer season) (Quesada et al., 2007).
Significant differences were observed between Psv populations in summer and in the other
seasons over the three-year study (Quesada et al., 2007).
Lavermicocca & Surico (1987) simultaneously analyzed Psv populations on olive tree leaves
and stems for the first time and during one year, reporting higher frequencies of Psv isolation
in stems than in leaves with relatively high epiphytic Psv populations in July (about 105
cfu/cm2) and only 10 cfu/cm2 in September and March. However, in Spain no significant
differences were found between either leaves or stems with respect to the number of analyzed
samples where Psv was isolated, detected by PCR, or regarding the average Psv populations
over several years (Bertolini et al., 2003a; Quesada et al., 2007; Quesada et al., 2010a, 2010b).
Given that in such studies the Psv number were evaluated on stems after they were cut into
pieces, some endophytic Psv could be also counted (Penyalver et al., 2006). Furthermore, both
types of plant material (stems and leaves) should be analyzed from symptomless shoots to
make the evaluation of Psv populations in the phyllosphere more accurate (Bertolini et al.,
2003a; Quesada et al., 2007). Psv was also isolated from the surface of olive fruits, but at lower
frequency than from leaves, reaching a high Psv population size in September (106 bacteria / g
fresh weight) (Lavermicocca & Surico, 1987).
Between 70 and 95% of the maximum variance of some microbiological parameters, such
as Psv density in the olive tree phyllosphere, was explained by the influence of seven
factors, four of which were related with the weather: summer, summer rainfall, winter
rainfall and warm fronts (Ercolani, 1985) and the three remaining factors were cambium
activity, leaf age and time of flowering. As described for other epiphytic bacteria and
hosts (Kinkel, 1997), Psv population densities varied over several orders of magnitude
among leaves sampled concurrently from the same shoot, as assessed by the comparison
of leaf printing and isolation experiments (Quesada et al., 2007). Due to the low detection
level associated with leaf printing (Jacques & Morris, 1995), such results also suggested
that Psv probably colonizes low numbers of leaves with high populations, in bulked
samples.
The size of Psv populations on each leaf correlated with leaf age, the time when it formed
and the time of the year when the sample was taken (Ercolani, 1991). In addition,
phenotypically distinct Psv isolates from the phyllosphere, succeed each other in time in the
olive tree phyllosphere (Ercolani, 1983). This was discovered because Psv isolates obtained
by washing leaves of a certain age at a particular time of the year (over eight years) showed
more phenotypic similarity with each other, than with isolates obtained by washing leaves
Epidemiology and Control of Plant Diseases Caused by Phytopathogenic Bacteria:
The Case of Olive Knot Disease Caused by Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. savastanoi 305
of different ages at different times of the year. Most of the Psv isolates obtained by washing
leaves of different ages taken at random in April, were less similar to each other in 60
phenotypic characters (they formed a single group at 65% similarity) than Psv isolates
obtained from six-month-old knots in October (one group formed 85% similarity). A similar
result was obtained when Psv isolates obtained by washing leaves in October were
compared with Psv isolates obtained from six-month-old knots in April (Ercolani, 1993). Psv
isolation from these knots was performed six months after washing leaves in April and
October as above indicated. Almost all isolates from knots reflected the dominant
phenotype of the isolates obtained from the phyllosphere six months earlier. Most Psv
isolated by washing leaves in April and October were phenotypically classified near to
isolates obtained by washing 13-month-old leaves. According to these authors, senescent
leaves (13 months old) could be the main source of bacteria for knot formation in April and
October (Ercolani, 1993).
Endophytic Psv populations could contribute to a dramatic increase in Psv numbers and in
olive knots in infected olive groves, when the copper-based control treatments are not
applied (Quesada et al., 2010b).
6. Bacterial spreading to
healthy plants by rain,
wind and cultural
practices 5. Bacteria + inadequate conditions =
new knots are not formed
Fig. 2. Disease cycle of olive knot caused by Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. savastanoi simulated
as red bacilli (kindly provided by E. Bertolini, 2003).
7. Effect of olive knot disease on the vigor and yield of olive trees
Although the olive knot disease is widespread throughout most olive-growing areas, there
is no accurate estimation of the losses it causes. This is very difficult to measure because
many factors can influence the severity of the symptoms. Severe infections can cause death
of branches and a progressive weakening, resulting in a loss of tree vigor (Tjamos et al.,
1993) and thus of harvest. De Andrs (1991) estimated that Psv-related losses were around
1.3% of national olive production in Spain. Occasionally, this disease has caused the loss of
almost the olive local harvest due to the combination of optimal weather conditions for
bacterial entry and multiplication, as observed in two Spanish localities in 1987 and 2001 (B.
Celada, personal communication) after severe hail storms. Furthermore, this disease is
present with variable incidence in many nursery plants, as it limits their commercialization
due to the visible symptoms. This is especially important in plants for export because
several countries that import plants from the European Union (EU), like Chile, consider Psv
as a quarantine organism.
The quantitative effects of olive knot disease on vigor and olive fruit yields are not yet well
established because there is only information available from one study in California and
another in Spain. In a commercial orchard in California (USA) significant differences were
308 Plant Pathology
not found in vigor between 40-year-old olive trees lightly (0.10-0.30 knots in 0.3 m of fruit
wood) and mildly (0.31-0.50 knots) infected with the disease (Schroth et al., 1973). In
contrast, in Spain in a study on non-inoculated and inoculated trees 7-year-old of cv.
Arbequina in a high-density grove, vigor was significantly higher in non-inoculated trees
(Quesada et al., 2010a). Therefore, vigor was higher in trees of cv. Arbequina where olive
knot disease was lower during the study, suggesting a negative effect over time of the
disease on plant development. Schroth et al. (1973) in California showed that there was a
clear relationship between crop losses and the number of tumors caused by Psv in branches.
They observed significant differences in the weight of olive fruits per tree in only one year
between lightly and mildly infected olive trees with 121.3 and 94.6 kg, respectively. In the
Spanish assays, the different levels of the disease did not significantly affect cumulative
olive yield (Quesada et al., 2010a) in young trees.
Furthermore, low oil quality was reported when olive fruits were harvested from olive trees
moderately affected with olive knot presenting odors and flavors such as bitter, stale or
salty, but the data were lacking of statistical support (Schroth et al., 1968; Tjamos et al.,
1993). In another study, olive knot disease incidence did not modify either the chemical or
organoleptic characteristics of virgin olive oil extracted from young olive tree fruits in a
high-density grove (Quesada et al., unpublished data).
8. Control methods
The methods used to control plant pathogenic bacteria are based on preventive and curative
measures and the combination of the two should be used in the context of an integrated
control. The five main goals of an integrated plant disease control program are to eliminate
or reduce the initial inoculum, reduce the effectiveness of the initial inoculum, increase host
resistance, delay disease onset and slow the secondary cycles (Agrios, 2005). The key of any
integrated control program is a question of sustainability at different levels (Caballero &
Murillo, 2003). In economic terms, it must ensure farmers profits and at the environmental
level, select control methods that minimize environmental impact. And finally, control
methods by themselves should ensure sustainability and they must remain effective over
time. The monitoring of a strategy of this type is essential to ensure safe and sustainable
agriculture.
Disease management of bacterial pathogens in the field is mainly based on preventive
procedures, because it is difficult to eradicate pathogens once established. Due to the
economic impact of the olive knot disease, growers require adequate control methods to
overcome its negative repercussions on yield and even on olive fruit quality (Quesada et al.,
2010a; Schroth et al., 1973). Olive knot control should be based on an integrated control
strategy, giving priority to the most effective measures that are of preventive type. These are
very diverse and can be grouped into regulatory measures, preventing introduction of the
pathogen in protected areas and prophylactic measures to reduce or eliminate the pathogen
or hinder its establishment in nurseries or orchards (Montesinos & Lpez, 1996).
very important that Psv appears in the EU list of pests and diseases that significantly affect
plant quality standards, drawn up by the European Commission (Directive N 92/34/EU).
As advised by the European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization (EPPO-
OEPP), new olive groves should be established using Psv-free certified plant material
(EPPO, 2006).
As an example, fifteen years ago, there was scarce reliable information available on the
sanitary status of Spanish olive plants with respect to pathogenic bacteria (Bertolini et al.,
1998; Padilla, 1997). Although there is now more information and analyses have been
performed, there is still a lack of scientific published data available on the status of olive
plants in the field or in nurseries, either in Spain or in other olive-growing countries.
Government agencies have shown an interest to control the planting material given the
increase number of plantations, the notable changes in production technologies and the
frequent commercial exchange of olive plants. All these facts emphasize the convenience of
providing plant material with certain quality standards and the implementation of
certification programs (Cambra et al., 1998).
With respect to this issue the EU has, so far, required the minimum conditions for the
nursery plants of type Agricultural Conformitas Comunitatis (or CAC). The implementation
of certification systems is the responsibility of each member state, but the European and
Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization (EPPO) has developed specifications for
certification of olive plants. These referred specifically to health although they were based
on studies conducted in Italy and Portugal and thus should be contrasted with the situation
in Spain (Chom, 1998).
Italy was the first country to publish standards for certification of plant material from olive
trees in 1993. Certified plants should be free from Psv, Verticillium dahliae and six virus (Olive
latent virus 1 (OLV-1), Olive latent virus 2 (OLV-2), Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV), Arabis
mosaic virus (ArMV), Cherry leaf roll virus (CLRV) and Strawberry latent ring spot virus
(SLRSV)) (Martelli, 1998). Besides Italy, other countries like Portugal, Israel, Argentina and
Spain, have also established certification programs for olive plant material. In the
Argentinan Certification program, the mother plants are annually tested and must be free of
P. syringae, Psv, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, V. dahliae and Phytophthora cinnamomi but viruses
are not considered.
There are more than 260 nurseries registered in Spain, mainly located in Andalusia and
Valencia, which produced about 5.5 million olive plants in 1999-2000 for new plantations
and also for international trade (Chom, 1998). Given this significant production, the Real
Decreto 1678/1999 (Anonymous, 1999) established quality control and certification
requirements for olive seedlings in the certification program of olive plant material in Spain.
Currently, the qualification of certified plant material is the responsibility of the competent
institutions in each region. To qualify for certification, plant material must meet certain
conditions such as having a known origin and having been submitted to cultivar analyses
and sanitary tests. Mother plants of the starting material and base material should be
officially inspected to verify that they are free of V. dahliae, Psv and viruses OLV-1, OLV-2,
CMV, ArMV, CLRV and SLRSV. Each year the plants for certification should be sampled
and tested for Psv by the responsible official body using approved techniques, which
include isolation, serology and nested multiplex RT-PCR. With this technique, Psv and four
310 Plant Pathology
olive viruses (CMV, CLRV, SLRSV and ArMV) can be detected simultaneously in a sensitive
single reaction (Bertolini et al., 2003b). Finally, parent plants of certified nursery stock must
be at least free of symptoms of diseases caused by fungi, bacteria and the viruses previously
cited.
8.2.1 Eradication
The presence of knots in a tree is related to a high level of disease after several years, and
this highlights the need of using preventive control methods or eradication methods to
maintain olive trees without knots (Quesada et al., 2010a). In affected plantations the main
olive knot disease eradication method would be the uprooting of the affected trees or the
use of cultural practices to reduce the inoculum source, performing copper treatments,
pruning of infected branches and reduction of number of wounds during the growing
season and especially at harvest (Beltr, 1956; Penyalver et al., 1998; Trapero & Blanco,
1998; Wilson, 1935). This is especially relevant in new plantations with high tree density
and frequent severe pruning, where control measures should be accurately monitored
(Tous et al., 2007).
The removal of knots is very laborious and may not be entirely effective because new
wounds are usually done when knots are removed and new knots can develop in these
wounds in the following years, even when treated with preventive chemicals (Wilson, 1935).
Pruning of infected branches is more effective than knot removal as fewer wounds are
caused to the olive tree and the bacterial inoculum load is minimised (Quesada et al., 2010a;
Teviotdale & Krueger, 2004; Wilson, 1935). All cut branches should be burned in the same
field to prevent the spread of the disease (Trapero & Blanco, 1998).
In the case of partially contaminated olive groves, healthy trees should be harvested and
pruned first (Wilson, 1935). Besides, growers should harvest olives in dry weather only
and avoid the use of techniques like knocking the olive tree branches with wooden poles
(Krueger et al., 1999). Manual harvesting methods, like the milking method or the use
of mechanical vibration are more suitable. It is important to assess the index of tree
damage in terms of broken branches and compare this to the olive fruit harvested. It has
been reported that knocking the olive tree branches with wood poles can break from 13 to
18% of branches while for mechanical vibration this is only 6 to 9%, on complete
harvesting (Civantos et al., 2008).
However, in woody crops, such as olive trees, breeders and plant pathologists are hindered
by the slow improvement in breeding processes as a result of delayed entry into fruition.
Another drawback is that the information available about cultivar susceptibility to olive
knot disease is scarce and mainly comes from field observations, such as those reported in
the USA and Spain (Barranco, 1998; Trapero & Blanco, 1998; Wilson, 1935). Very few data
are available from comparative inoculation experiments and is limited to several cultivars
(five to eight) from Italy, Greece, Morocco, and Portugal (Benjama, 1994; Catara et al., 2005;
Hassani et al., 2003; Marcelo et al., 1999; Panagopoulos, 1993; Varvaro & Surico 1978), with
the exception of Spain where 29 cultivars were evaluated (Penyalver et al., 2006). Field
observations do not always give universally valid information on the intrinsic susceptibility
of each cultivar because the initial quantity of bacterial inoculum differs between plants and
factors favoring infection can vary in different areas.
Varvaro & Surico (1978) compared the behavior of six Italian olive cultivars inoculated with
Psv and found no difference, because more than 95% of the inoculated wounds developed
tumors. This was probably due to the high inoculum dose applied (more than 106 bacteria
per wound) and because the inoculated plants were only one year old. Different doses of
eight Psv isolates were inoculated in six olive cultivars in comparative inoculation
experiments from Morocco (Benjama, 1994). The results showed that the cultivar Frantoio
was the most susceptible among those tested, followed by Ascolana dura, Manzanilla,
Picholine marocaine, Dahbia and Gordal Sevillana, which was the least susceptible,
although a statistical analysis of the data was not performed. Marcelo et al. (1999) evaluated
six Portuguese cultivars and found they differed in the percentage of knots formed at
inoculation points, ranging from 36 to 66%. These authors considered that the cultivars
Blanqueta, Cobrancosa, Cordovil de Serpa, Galega Vulgar, Redondil and Santulhana were
moderately susceptible to olive knot disease, but their data were not statistically analysed.
Hassani et al. (2003) evaluated the Italian cultivars Frantoio, Leccino, Moraiolo and Nostrale
di Rigali by inoculation of five Psv strains with an inoculum dose of 5x107 bacteria per
wound and subsequently knot weights were compared. Although they did not indicate the
percentage of inoculation sites that developed knots, it is likely that this parameter exceeded
90% in the four cultivars because an excessively high inoculum dose was used.
Penyalver et al. (2006) developed a methodology for evaluation of cultivar susceptibility to
Psv and reported that most of that 21 Psv strains evaluated in virulence tests showed a high
degree of aggressiveness but also, in some combinations, cultivar-strain interactions were
observed. Consequently, strain selection for inoculation is a pre-requisite to obtaining useful
data, and at least two strains should be used for accurate evaluations. The methodology was
optimized for the first time with 29 olive cultivars. It was concluded that plant material
should be genetically homogeneous, at least two or three years old, inoculated in spring or
early summer by wounds made with a sterile scalpel. The use of at least two Psv strains
with high degree of virulence was also recommended. They should be inoculated at low
inoculum doses (102 bacteria per wound) to differentiate among different cultivars, as well
as at a high dose (106 bacteria per wound) to identify the less susceptible cultivars. Ten olive
plants should be used per bacterial strain and dose. Five wounds should be performed thus
per plant and several measurements of symptoms taken for each combination, although the
measurement taken at 90 days was the data included in the analysis of 29 cultivars from the
World Olive Germplasm Bank of Spain, located in Cordoba.
312 Plant Pathology
copper hydroxide to control the incidence of knots was higher after three sprays than after
two or one single spray. New information has been gathered about the effect of copper
compounds on the population dynamics of epiphytic Psv, the possible appearance of copper
resistance, or its role in decreasing olive knot incidence under Mediterranean conditions in
high-density groves (Quesada et al., 2010b).
The effect of copper oxychloride or cuprocalcic sulfate plus mancozeb treatments on Psv
populations and subsequent disease development were evaluated in an olive grove planted
with two susceptible cultivars, Arbequina and Picudo, over a four-year period. Unlike the
previous studies, to homogenize the knot number per tree before beginning treatments,
olive trees were inoculated. The effect of copper on Psv populations was observed after the
first application, but the greatest differences between copper-treated and untreated plants
were observed in the third year, after five copper applications. Two applications of copper
compounds per year, reduced Psv populations effectively. We also found that treatment
with copper compounds had a drastic effect on reducing disease incidence (Quesada et al.,
2010b). These results for both cultivars, in this high-density grove, supported previous
observations by Teviotdale and Krueger (2004) in California, in standard groves. Unlike
other plant pathogenic bacteria that develop copper resistance after extensive exposure to
copper compounds (Cazorla et al., 2002; Cooksey, 1990; Garret & Schwartz, 1998; Marco &
Stall, 1983; Scheck et al., 1996; Sundin et al., 1989, 1994), copper resistance was not detected
in the remaining Psv bacteria in copper-treated olives trees.
Chemical treatments based on antibiotics and oil-water emulsion containing hydrocarbons
have also been recommended but without encouraging results (Scrivani & Bugiani, 1955;
Schroth & Hildebrand, 1968). The use of antibiotics such as streptomycin and terramycin has
been successful under experimental conditions (Trapero & Blanco, 1998) but their
application against plant pathogenic bacteria is currently forbidden by the EU legislation,
although it is permitted in some other countries.
Systemic acquired response, or SAR, is plants ability to generate defense reactions against
external aggression at sites far away from the point of attack. In these distant sites, the genes
involved in defense processes are activated (e.g. PR proteins), thereby increasing the
resistance of these tissues against possible further attacks (Durrant & Dong, 2004; Kessmann
et al., 1994). Some products were recently evaluated for their induction of plant resistance
against different pathogens such as acibenzolar-S-methyl (Bion ), fosetyl-aluminium,
calcium prohexadione or harpins. They were assayed to control some bacterial plant
diseases like fire blight, citrus canker, apical necrosis of mango, etc. Most of these products
do not produce phytotoxicity and their efficacy is sometimes comparable to that of
antibiotics or copper-based compounds while others could not control these diseases
(Brisset et al., 2000; Cazorla et al., 2006; Graham & Leite, 2004; Scortichini, 2002,). There are
reports of acibenzolar-S-methyl-related activation of certain genes involved in defense
responses in olive leaves of the cultivar Lechn de Sevilla (Muoz et al., 2005). However, in
one experiment acibenzolar-S-methyl did not reduce either Psv populations or the incidence
of olive knot disease after two treatments per year over a four-year period (Quesada et al.,
2010b). It is possible that different doses and more product applications could be required
for achieve better efficacy. Curiously, vigor of cv. Picudo was significantly higher in olive
trees treated with acibenzolar-S-methyl than in untreated trees, although disease incidence
was similar in both treated and untreated olive trees (Quesada et al., 2010b).
Epidemiology and Control of Plant Diseases Caused by Phytopathogenic Bacteria:
The Case of Olive Knot Disease Caused by Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. savastanoi 315
9. General conclusions
Remarkable progress has been made in several aspects of the host-pathogen interaction of
the causal agent of olive knot disease, recently. Additionally, studies on the epidemiology of
olive knot disease, as well as on its chemical control, have also been reported to add to the
scarce information available. However, further studies are needed to assess reliably the
importance of the endophytic phase of Psv in the epidemiology of olive knot as well as the
effect of different chemical on disease incidence. Furthermore, studies on the qualitative and
quantitative effects of the disease on olive production are insufficient.
The production, maintenance and use of certified and potentially pathogen-free plant
material, is one of the main preventive measures used to control plant pathogens and
certification schemes based in analytical tests performed on olive plants before leaving the
nurseries should be implemented. Although, so far, true resistance to this disease is
uncommon among olive cultivars tested, significant differences were observed in the degree
of susceptibility to the disease among them. Cultivars tolerant to olive knot and
resistant/tolerant to climatic conditions, or avoiding cultural practices which favor olive
knot development should be considered for planting in the new commercial fields. This is
especially important for high density new plantations.
The olive knot disease integrated control should combine healthy plant material with
appropriate cultural practices and the use, like preventive treatments, of chemical
compounds. In such a context, copper treatments should be used regularly to achieve
effective control.
10. Acknowledgments
Authors wish to thank M. Cambra for critical reading and suggestions. We also thank E.
Bertolini for generously give us permission to include Figure 2. The research of J.M.
Quesada was supported by a predoctoral fellowship from IFAPA, Andaluca, Spain. This
work was supported in part by grant CAO00-007 from INIA, Spain.
316 Plant Pathology
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326 Plant Pathology
Horizontal or Generalized
Resistance to Pathogens in Plants
P.J. Keane
Department of Botany, La Trobe University, Victoria
Australia
1. Introduction
The threat to world wheat production and the panic among the agricultural science
community caused by the emergence of the super virulent wheat stem rust (Puccinia
graminis tritici) race Ug99 in East Africa (Singh et al., 2011) is a reminder that the name and
ideas of the South African J.E. van der Plank should not be forgotten. Based on his long
experience with resistance to Phytophthora infestans in potatoes, he developed in his seminal
books, Plant Diseases: Epidemics and Control (1963) and Disease Resistance in Plants (1968), the
quantitative study of disease epidemics and the associated concepts of vertical and
horizontal resistance to emphasize the two contrasting types of resistance to disease in
crops. He contended that our preoccupation through the 20th Century with the more
scientifically fascinating and precise vertical resistance, controlled by identifiable genes with
a major effect, had resulted in the unfortunate neglect of the more mundane and nebulous
horizontal resistance, mostly inherited quantitatively, even though it is evident that the
former is unstable in the field while the latter is more stable and consistently useful. The
saga of the scientific study of disease resistance shows our human tendency to dig where the
light shines brightest, not where we know the potatoes are buried. This tendency continues
unabated with the preoccupation of molecular biologists with vertical resistance, often
discussed currently as if it is the only form of resistance.
Before their domestication, plants co-evolved with their parasites and underwent natural
selection for resistance to them. Since the dawn of agriculture, plants with a degree of
resistance to pathogens and insect pests have been selected by farmers, either consciously or
unconsciously. In the genetically diverse crops of early agriculture, when plants of
particular species began to be crowded together and so made more vulnerable to pest and
disease attack, plants with great susceptibility would have been selected against in
competition with more resistant types. They would have contributed fewer offspring to the
next generation. Traditional farmers would have learned very early that it was better to
select seed or vegetative propagating material from the healthiest plants and they still do so
today. It is highly likely that they were selecting for partial or quantitative (van der Planks
horizontal) resistance. They werent selecting for resistance to particular pests or diseases
but rather for general plant health. They selected for pest and disease resistance as they
selected for higher yield and other quantitatively inherited traits such as size and quality of
the harvested product and adaptation to the environment. This process has been replicated
328 Plant Pathology
by Simmonds (1964, 1966) who re-created the domesticated potato common in Europe
(Solanum tuberosum ssp. tuberosum) by repeated mass selection of true seed of the best types
from the highly variable wild Andian potato (S. tuberosum ssp. andigena). The potatoes were
exposed to late blight epidemics during the selection process, and it was shown that the
selected materials were more resistant to the disease than the standard domesticated potato
(Thurston, 1971).
Through the 1800s there were reports of wheat farmers noticing in their fields occasional
off-types with complete resistance or immunity (probably vertical resistance in van der
Planks terms) to a prevalent disease, although little practical use was made of this until it
was understood that it was inherited (Biffen, 1905, p.40). It would have been possible to spot
these completely resistant types and to distinguish them from escapes only when disease
levels were very high and practically all plants in a crop were heavily diseased. In the late
1800s, plants that appeared to be resistant in the field were selected, multiplied and
promoted for use on a wider scale. A farmer in South Australia, James Ward, planted a
South African variety called De Toit and noticed that it was generally as rusty as a horse
nail except for a few plants that were rust-free (Callaghan & Millington, 1956) and were
later thought to have arisen from a contaminant (Farrer, 1898). Ward saved the seed of these
plants and increased it to produce a commercial variety named Wards Prolific. Because of
its rust resistance and other characters, this became the most widely grown wheat in South
Australia at the time. Rees et al. (1979) showed that in the 1970s this variety had little
horizontal resistance and so it is likely that Ward had selected a type of extreme resistance
that has since been overcome by the pathogen. Another South Australian farmer, Daniel
Leak, noticed an occasional rust-free plant in a crop of heavily rusted Tuscany wheat, and
selected and multiplied this as a commercial variety called Leaks Rust-proof (Williams,
1991). There were many similar attempts at selecting rust resistant wheat, resulting in other
varieties like Andersons Rust-proof and Kalms Rust-proof for which rust resistance was
claimed (Cobb 1890). Farmers were developing a general appreciation of inherited variation
in disease resistance. The Australian wheat breeder, William Farrer (1898), was one of the
first to declare that resistance to wheat stem rust was inherited (Biffen, 1905). With the
discovery of Mendels work on the genetics of particular traits of the garden pea, his
methods were soon applied to the trait of extreme disease resistance that had been observed
in certain crops. R.H. Biffen, working at Cambridge University with resistance to stripe rust
(Puccinia striiformis) in wheat, was the first to take up these studies, beginning in 1902 and
summarizing his findings in papers entitled Mendels laws of inheritance and wheat
breeding (Biffen, 1905) and Studies in the inheritance of disease resistance (Biffen, 1907).
He showed that a high level of disease resistance or immunity was inherited as a simple
Mendelian character, and so could be crossed readily into well adapted varieties. Thus
began our enchantment with the use of resistance genes to protect our crops from disease
and the search for them in crop varieties and in the centres of evolution and diversification
of the crops (Vavilov, 1951).
Potato late blight caused by Ph. infestans has been central to modern plant pathology since
the catastrophic epidemics in 1845-47 in Western Europe and Ireland that triggered the
terrible Irish famine of the period and led to our understanding that a fungus could invade
and cause disease in a healthy plant. While no completely resistant off-types were noticed
amongst the heavily blighted potato crops of the 1800s, a wild Solanum species collected
Horizontal or Generalized Resistance to Pathogens in Plants 329
from Mexico was shown to be immune to late blight (Salaman, 1910). In breeding
experiments, individuals of this species stood out as completely healthy amongst genotypes
of the cultivated potato that were severely diseased. This stimulated collecting expeditions
to Central America to discover sources of resistance in wild relatives of the cultivated
potato. Solanum demissum, a wild potato species from Mexico, was shown to have several
resistance (R) genes that conferred immunity to late blight. This immunity was evident as a
hypersensitive necrotic response in the leaf tissues invaded by the pathogen. At the time, it
was considered to be the solution to the late blight problem in Europe and North America
(Reddick, 1934). These R genes were cross-bred into the domesticated potato (S. tuberosum
ssp. tuberosum) that formerly had no identifiable genes for immunity to late blight. However,
with their widespread use in the field these varieties soon succumbed completely to the
disease (Thurston, 1971). They were immune to some isolates (races) of the fungus but were
completely susceptible to other races that increased in the pathogen population in response
to the selective pressure resulting from the widespread use of a particular resistant variety.
It was said that their resistance broke down with the selection of virulent races of the
pathogen that could invade the varieties with R genes. Van der Plank (1963) said that these
varieties showed vertical resistance, named after the extreme vertical differences evident in
the graphic plot of the degree of resistance (or, conversely, the amount of disease) on the Y-
axis against a series of races of the pathogen along the X-axis (Figure 1). The sharp contrast
between varieties with high levels of disease and those with very low levels and often no
disease at all (immunity), shown by the abrupt vertical jumps in van der Planks bar graphs,
allowed identification of Mendelian genes with strong effects on resistance; hence the genes
are often referred to as major resistance genes or just resistance genes. Varieties with
different resistance genes gave completely different plots of resistance (or amount of
disease) against races (Figure 1).
Varieties lacking R genes, or whose R genes were matched by the virulence of the prevailing
pathogen races, gave more-or-less similar amounts of disease when inoculated with
different races. The amount of disease could be high or low. Van der Plank said that
varieties showing low levels of disease had horizontal resistance, the plot of degree of
resistance or amount of disease against a series of races being more-or-less horizontal, or at
least not showing extreme variation from complete resistance to great susceptibility evident
with vertical resistance (Figure 1; van der Plank, 1963, Figs. 14.1, 14.2). The plot for two
varieties may be displaced up or down, but the more resistant variety is more resistant to all
races. The graph may not be completely horizontal; it may show some up and down
displacements depending on the relative aggressiveness of the races, but the displacements
are the same for different varieties. The fundamental difference between the two types of
resistance is that vertical resistance in the host varieties shows a sharp differential
interaction (a strong statistical interaction) with the pathogen races; i.e. the amount of
vertical resistance is specific for a particular race (very high for one race in Figure 1, very
low for the other). It is race-specific. Horizontal resistance is not race-specific to the
extreme degree evident in vertical resistance (Figure 1). Because it is race-specific, the effect
of vertical resistance is prone to being lost rapidly due to selection of virulent races in the
pathogen population. Lacking this sharp interaction, horizontal resistance tends to be more
stable, more durable. That is its big advantage. Researchers working with late blight
resistance in potato concluded that R-gene hypersensitivity cannot be relied upon as a
permanent protection against Phytophthora infestans and so the necessity of providing a
330 Plant Pathology
100
90
80
70
60 Race A1
Percent
50 Race A2
Disease 40
30
20
10
0
Variety Variety Variety Variety
Vr R1 Vr R2 Hr a Hr b
Fig. 1. Plot of percent disease in two varieties with vertical resistance (Vr R1 with resistance
gene R1; Vr R2 with resistance gene R2) and two varieties lacking vertical resistance (R
genes) but expressing some horizontal resistance (Hr a, Hr b) infected with two pathogen
races (A1 with avirulence against R1; A2 with avirulence against R2). Vertical resistance
shows a strong interaction with the races (i.e. is race-specific). Horizontal resistance does
not (i.e. is non-race-specific) although it shows significant main effects of Variety (variety
Hr a is more susceptible to both races than Hr b) and Race (race A2 is more aggressive than
A1 on both varieties, and this is also evident in the vertically resistant varieties where the R
gene is ineffective).
Horizontal resistance has had a much longer history in human knowledge than vertical
resistance and has had a greater profusion of names. Once, probably all observed resistance
was of this type. It is probably the resistance that keeps minor pathogens consistently
minor and consequently is not much studied for these pathogens because they are of minor
importance. For the major pathogens, farmers would often recognize that certain varieties
got less disease than other varieties. For particular diseases, slow-rusting, slow-
mildewing (for powdery mildews), slow-blighting (for potato late blight) or slow-
blasting (for rice blast) are older terms that accurately describe horizontal resistance, an
essential feature of which is the slowing down of epidemics. In natural plant communities
or crops with a diversity of resistance genes (e.g. traditional mixed crops), vertical resistance
will also slow down epidemics, but in current monocultures vertical resistance tends to
prevent epidemics until such time as it is matched by virulence in a large proportion of the
pathogen population. Several terms have been used to distinguish this general resistance
from the race-specific resistance discovered in the early 1900s. These have included partial
resistance, quantitative resistance, generalized resistance, field resistance, adult-plant
resistance, durable resistance, and tolerance. All have their problems. Race-non-specific
resistance, usefully abbreviated to non-specific resistance, best captures the essential
Horizontal or Generalized Resistance to Pathogens in Plants 331
nature of this resistance as highlighted by van der Plank, although at a fine level a degree of
race-specificity has been shown to apply to it (Parlevliet, 1995). Field resistance was
commonly used for potato varieties lacking R genes, but is not a good general term as the
resistance of a crop variety in the field could be due to a combination of vertical and
horizontal resistance. General resistance can refer to the resistance of a variety to several
pests and diseases and again could be the result of both vertical and horizontal resistance.
Sometimes tolerance is used for horizontal resistance, but this is certainly incorrect.
Tolerance has a special meaning: it refers to plant varieties that suffer less damage for a
given degree of infection compared with a disease sensitive variety (Caldwell et al., 1958;
Schafer, 1971). This has the same meaning as rust-enduring referred to by N.A. Cobb
(1894), one of the earliest students of rust resistance. Certainly, horizontal resistance is
usually partial and quantitative and can be expressed in a gradient from very little
disease to quite a lot, depending on the host genotype, the aggressiveness of the pathogen
and the environment. But, for some diseases it can be complete. Thus, the non-prescriptive
term, horizontal resistance, is perhaps the best. Generalized resistance as applied to
potatoes is also apt. Robinson (1976) favoured the terms vertical and horizontal resistance
because they were somewhat abstract, and in fact had application beyond disease resistance;
e.g. to fungicide use whereby copper-based fungicides could be regarded as horizontal in
effect because they knocked out several enzyme systems and the fungi could not adapt to
them, while the new, highly specific fungicides like benomyl are vertical because they
knock out only one narrow function and the fungi can adapt to them (they break down in
the same way that vertical resistance breaks down).
Until it is matched by a virulent race, vertical resistance tends to be complete or to reduce
reproduction of the pathogen to a tiny amount. That is its great attraction and that is how it
was first noticed (Callaghan & Millington, 1956; Biffen, 1907; Salaman, 1910). In the 1800s it
was observed by farmers as stark off-types in crops of rusted wheat. The domesticated
wheat species probably had vertical resistance genes against stem rust, while the
domesticated potato in Europe did not have vertical resistance genes against late blight until
they were bred into it from a wild relative. Horizontal resistance is harder to detect and
measure, although it is likely to be selected unconsciously by observant farmers who collect
their seed from their healthiest looking plants. It tends to be partial or quantitative in its
expression (i.e. there is some disease and some sporulation of the pathogen) but the rate of
development of the disease epidemic is reduced compared with that on a susceptible variety
under similar environmental conditions. Van der Planks interest in disease epidemiology
(the quantitative study of populations of pathogens and crops) led to his understanding of
the importance of partial resistance. There has been a recent shift in thinking about pests
and diseases we no longer talk about their control, which implies their elimination from a
crop; rather we now talk about pest and disease management which implies acceptance of
some level of their presence as long as they cause little economic loss. Under the modern
concept of Integrated Pest Management (IPM), moderate levels of pest/disease resistance in
a crop may be sufficient if applied synergistically with cultural control methods and
minimal, targeted use of pesticides. Under the IPM approach, resistance does not have to be
complete; partial resistance may be all that is required, and horizontal resistance becomes
important. Modern plant breeders and pathologists talk about avoiding high degrees of
susceptibility. The idea of IPM was promoted initially by entomologists in response to the
phenomenon of breakdown of insecticide efficacy that is analogous to the breakdown of
332 Plant Pathology
disease resistance. Entomologists have realized the futility of the scorched earth approach
to the use of insecticides in an attempt to eliminate pests from crops. They now accept that
there is a threshold level of pest infestation below which little economic damage is caused.
Entomologists are now emphasizing crop resistance (mostly of a horizontal nature) to insect
pests after a long period of total reliance on insecticides (and consequent neglect and decline
of resistance to insect pests in crops), while the repeated problem of the breakdown of
disease resistance in many crops, exemplified by the emergence of wheat stem rust race
Ug99, has led to a re-awakening of plant pathologists to the merits of horizontal resistance
after a long period of pre-occupation with vertical resistance. It appears that both
entomologists and plant pathologists are emerging from a period of bedazzlement by
scientific and technical revolutions (the insecticide revolution and the resistance gene
revolution) that showed great promise in the laboratory but lost their effectiveness
following their widespread use as stand-alone control measures in the farmers fields. It is
now realized that these brilliant technical developments, that offered an illusion of a simple
and complete revolution in control of pests and diseases, have to be incorporated into the
ecological complexity of crop growth and production in the field. Rather than revolutions,
a steady evolution of stable IPM methods, based on a foundation of steady evolution of
horizontal resistance, is required. Of course, in addition to cultural methods, IPM methods
may include targeted use of pesticides and vertical resistance, which, in IPM, are supported
by the other methods that prolong and enhance their value. This approach is far from new.
In the 1890s, Australia and North America produced vast quantities of very cheap wheat
that flooded the European markets. It is obvious that the production was highly successful
in most years. The potentially devastating wheat stem rust was managed effectively for long
periods by a combination of use of early maturing varieties (that avoided the worst of the
epidemics late in the growing season and allowed disease escape), drought adapted
varieties (that allowed wheat to be grown in drier climates not conducive to the rust), the
use of varieties that had probably been selected unconsciously over the years for a degree of
horizontal resistance, and later, the addition of vertical resistance (e.g. in a variety like
Thatcher in North America) and the deliberate incorporation of horizontal resistance by
cross-breeding with tetraploid wheats.
rust with virulence on Sr11 increased from nil to 91% by 1950 and the resistance of Gabo
was broken. The period of the boom and bust cycle of resistance breeding had begun and
the fascinating phenomenon of pathogen-resistance specificity was revealed.
Our knowledge of vertical resistance has a short history, beginning with the discovery of
Mendels genetics and the subsequent work of R.H. Biffen at Cambridge University in 1902.
It has been shown to be expressed almost universally as a hypersensitive necrosis of host
cells contacted by the pathogen during the early stages of infection, in some cases occurring
rapidly in the first few cells contacted and so evident only under a microscope (infection
type 0 in the scheme of Stakman and Levine, 1922, for cereal rusts), and in others occurring
only after the pathogen has invaded a large patch of cells which dies and so is evident to the
naked eye as a necrotic fleck (infection types 0; and 1 in cereal rusts). In some cases, the
pathogen may develop to the extent of a small amount of sporulation before the lesion
becomes necrotic (infection type 2). It has been shown to be controlled by a gene-for-gene
interaction between the pathogen and the host (Flor, 1956). Flor worked with flax rust
(Melampsora lini), which completes its sexual reproductive cycle on flax (Linum
usitatissimum), rather than with wheat stem rust which requires two hosts (wheat and
barberry) to complete its sexual cycle. In a brilliant study, he showed that for every rust
Horizontal or Generalized Resistance to Pathogens in Plants 335
resistance gene in flax there is a corresponding gene for virulence (actually, avirulence if
genes are named after their dominant allele) in flax rust (Table 2). Resistance is usually
dominant to susceptibility and resistance genes occur as multiple alleles at a restricted
number of loci in the plant while avirulence is usually dominant to virulence and avirulence
genes occur at separate loci in the rust. That is, the number of resistance genes that can be
expressed in the plant is restricted while there is no such restriction on the number of
possible virulences that can be expressed in the rust. This ensures that the pathogen will
always be able to overcome the resistance expressed in the host. While the meticulous and
exhaustive work of Flor with flax rust has been repeated for very few other diseases, there is
evidence that the relationship occurs in many highly specialized parasitic relationships
(Sidhu, 1975), including several insect-plant relationships (Broekgaarden et al., 2011). It is
usually expressed after the formation of haustoria in the highly specialized biotrophic
parasites such as the rusts and powdery mildews and so appears to require intimate
molecular contact between the pathogen and host. Rust resistance genes have been cloned
from four of the five resistance loci in flax and they all appear to code for similar proteins, in
the Nucleotide Binding Site-Leucine Rich Repeat (NBS-LRR) class (Ellis et al., 2007). Many
resistance genes for a wide range of pathogens (including Phytophthora, rusts, powdery
mildew, downy mildew, viruses, nematodes and bacteria) in a wide range of hosts
(including potato, lettuce, tomato, barley, maize and Arabidopsis) have been found to fit into
the same or similar class (Martin et al., 2003; Nimchuk et al., 2003). The resistance genes
against the highly specialized phloem-feeding insect parasites of plants also appear to fall
into this class (Broekgaarden et al., 2011). Thus, the recent molecular studies appear to
confirm that vertical resistance involves a particular molecular system for recognition and
rapid response to an invading parasite. On the other hand, the avirulence genes cloned from
flax rust code for small secreted proteins (effector proteins) that show no similarity
between loci, providing evidence that their main function is probably something to do with
the normal metabolism of the fungus and not to make them avirulent on their host. Their
avirulence arises from the fact that they happen to be recognized by the resistance-coded
proteins, leading to inhibition of the fungus. If avirulence genes code for proteins with a
function in the normal life of the pathogen, this would explain the commonly observed
phenomenon of stabilizing selection (Flor, 1956; van der Plank, 1968), whereby races
expressing virulence (recessive mutants of A genes, often assumed to be non-functional) at
one or more loci tend to be less fit than avirulent races on hosts that have no resistance
genes. If avirulence genes code for a variety of normal functions in a pathogen, they could
vary in the likelihood of their virulent (double recessive) mutant rising to prominence in the
pathogen population, via mutation and selection for fitness, and so overcoming the
particular resistance in the plant population (Luig, 1983). For example, if an avirulence gene
(AvrX) coded for an essential function in the pathogen, then loss of this function in the
homozygous virulent mutant (avrX avrX) may mitigate against the selection and buildup of
this mutant, even if it matches the resistance RX in the host population. This could help
explain the phenomenon of weak and strong vertical resistance genes as proposed by van
der Plank (1968) and observed commonly in the field i.e. some vertical resistance genes
break down much more rapidly than others. The genes that are overcome rapidly are
matched by races in which the mutation to virulence has little cost in fitness of the pathogen.
If the mutation to virulence against a particular gene imposes a high cost in general fitness
of the pathogen, the virulent race will not build up rapidly and the resistance gene will not
be rapidly overcome; it will be seen to be strong.
336 Plant Pathology
The ecological significance of the gene-for-gene relationship is that the rust is always able to
match the resistance in the host it can have unrestricted expression of virulence genes able
to match any resistance genes that may occur in the plant population. The evolutionary
significance is that the rust and the flax can co-exist and co-evolve. The evidence for this is
that the host and the pathogen still exist: the plant has not driven the rust to extinction and
the rust has not driven the plant to extinction. Mathematical studies have shown that the
gene-for-gene system as described by Flor and elucidated further by Person et al. (1962) can
be the basis of co-evolution when both the plant and the parasite are genetically variable
and adaptive over time (i.e. are outbreeding) and genetically diverse in space (i.e. occur in
populations of the species consisting of several different genotypes)(Mode, 1958).
Geneticists call this balanced polymorphism (Person, 1967). The gene-for-gene relationship
(vertical resistance) probably evolved as a system that protected natural, genetically diverse,
outbreeding and adaptive plant populations from excessive disease on the basis of the well
documented mixture or multiline effect; pathogen races sporulating on a particular plant
would not have been able to attack the immediate neighbors which had other resistance
genes. This controls the pathogen population so that it doesnt overly reduce the fitness of
the host population (otherwise the host could be outcompeted by other species and become
extinct) and the parasite is also able to survive. This system functions as long as the
pathogen does not build up a super race with virulence against all the genes in the plant
population. The stabilizing selection first observed by Flor (1956) and referred to above
would tend to reduce the chance of such a race developing.
Thus, we can hypothesize that vertical resistance evolved in the outbreeding, genetically
diverse, wild ancestors of crop species before their domestication, and that, as Mode (1958)
said, the systems of vertical resistance we see in crop species today are the relics of ancient
systems of polymorphism, stemming from the time when wheat, barley and flax reproduced
by outbreeding. (i.e. before their complete domestication). Evidence for this is the fact that
the regions of evolution and diversification of crops (the Vavilov Regions) are the
repositories of the vertical resistance genes in those crops (Leppik, 1970); that is where plant
breeders, inspired by Vavilov (1951), have gone to find new resistance genes. It is possible
that vertical resistance continued to play a role in stabilization of disease in traditional
agriculture, where crop diversity was maintained. The rapid breakdown of vertical
resistance in modern agriculture is due to the fact that we are now using the genes in
planting systems that lack the genetic diversity in space and time of the ancestral wild and
the early domesticated plant communities (Browning, 1974; Simmonds, 1979). It is a
fascinating fact of agricultural botany that domestication has transformed many of our most
important crop species from outbreeders in the wild to inbreeders in agriculture, and we are
increasingly transforming our agricultural systems from polycultures to monocultures. The
constant trend in modern industrial agriculture, driven, against all ecological wisdom, by
global economics and centralized, powerful agricultural institutions, has been the steady
elimination of this diversity in crop populations, including the critically important
repositories of diversity in the regions of crop evolution (the Vavilov Centres). Thus, in
modern agriculture the use of vertical resistance has coincided with a tendency to remove
the genetic diversity that probably underpinned it in the wild pathosystems and in
traditional mixed agricultural systems. In the deployment of resistance genes, crops are in
fact becoming global monocultures, hence the problem and the panic created by Ug99.
Horizontal or Generalized Resistance to Pathogens in Plants 337
which it is grown. They considered that the former was due to a real physiological
incompatibility between the resistant plants and the invading fungus and that the
struggle between host and parasite was short and decisive and involved only a few cells in
the most resistant plants ---- In susceptible varieties, however, the fungus apparently does
not injure the host cells immediately but actually seems to stimulate them to increase
physiological activity. Stakman and Harrar (1957) in their important textbook Principles of
Plant Pathology recognized that There are various types of resistance in plants. The more
kinds a variety has, the more likely it is to be generally resistant. The high degree of
specificity between certain physiological races of pathogens and certain varieties of plants
has been emphasized repeatedly. A variety may be immune from one race but completely
susceptible to another. If more can be learned about the kinds of resistance that are effective
against all physiological races, however, it might be possible to breed varieties that have at
least some resistance to all races. --- For example, some varieties of wheat have physiological
resistance to many races of the stem rust fungus. If it is possible to add resistance to entrance
because of stomatal characters, to extension in the tissues because of tough cells and barriers
of sclerenchyma, and to the rupture of the epidermis by the sporulating mycelium, the
variety should be much more resistant than those which have only one or a few of the many
characters that can contribute to resistance. Even though the specific contribution of each
character might be relatively slight, the combination of all of them might be effective under
a wide range of conditions. The insights of these early students of disease resistance have
often been forgotten.
It is worth discussing resistance to late blight in potato in more detail as this clearly shows
the contrast between vertical and horizontal resistance, as thoroughly reviewed by Thurston
(1971). The potato now widely grown throughout the world, S. tuberosum ssp. tuberosum, but
thought to have originated in the Andian region of South America, had no vertical
resistance to Ph. infestans until resistance genes were bred into it in Europe by crossing with
a wild relative, S. demissum, which is native to Central America and clearly had a co-evolved
vertical resistance pathosystem with Ph. infestans (controlled by R genes, eleven of which
have been transferred into the potato in the 20th Century; Malcolmson & Black, 1966). It
appears that Ph. infestans evolved as a parasite on S. demissum and other wild species in
Central America and not on S. tuberosum ssp. tuberosum and S. tuberosum ssp. andigena in the
Andes, and is in fact a new-encounter pathogen on S. tuberosum ssp. tuberosum (Leppik,
1970). Varieties like Maritta and Kennebec that have the R1 resistance gene transferred from
S. demissum show complete resistance expressed as hypersensitive necrosis to pathogen
races with avirulence on R1, but are susceptible to races that have virulence against R1
(Table 2); however, Kennebec is more susceptible than Maritta to these virulent races (van
der Plank 1963). Maritta has more background horizontal resistance than Kennebec to races
that can infect both varieties. Many potato varieties lack R genes, and these vary in
horizontal resistance to Ph. infestans. The variety Capella has a very high degree of
horizontal resistance: it can become infected (i.e. it can be said to be compatible with Ph.
infestans the fungus can grow and reproduce in the variety), but the fungus takes longer to
produce lesions, the lesions are smaller, the fungus sporulates sparsely on the lesions, the
plants remain green overall, the epidemic develops slowly, and the variety still yields well
(van der Plank, 1963). This is in sharp contrast to the very susceptible varieties being grown
in Ireland at the time of the great Irish Potato Famine in 1845-47, where the disease
developed very fast, spread throughout western Europe in a matter of months, killed plants
Horizontal or Generalized Resistance to Pathogens in Plants 341
rapidly, decimated yield and rotted even the few tubers that were formed. Beginning in
1912, many observers documented the occurrence of degrees of resistance to late blight in
the field before the time when R genes were bred into the potato (Thurston, 1971). This was
often referred to as general resistance. It was noted that inhibition of disease in these early
resistant varieties could be due to inhibition at several stages of the process of pathogenesis,
most notably resulting in (i) a reduced number of infections for a given inoculum dose
(i.e. inhibition acting prior to penetration of the leaf by the fungus), (ii) a reduced rate of
growth of mycelium in the plant tissues, (iii) a delay in sporulation, and (iv) a reduced
number of sporangia produced per unit area of lesion. While vertical resistance is
invariably associated with the sudden collapse and death of host cells during the initial
establishment of parasitism (especially establishment of haustoria), horizontal resistance
can be associated with death of invaded host tissue much later in the parasitic process.
Van der Plank (1968, p.185) described how necrosis often occurs in the centres of
developing lesions on potato varieties with horizontal resistance to Ph. infestans, resulting
in a narrower zone of sporulation on the lesion than in a susceptible variety; he
considered that it was possible to judge the degree of horizontal resistance of a variety by
the amount of necrosis evident in sporulating lesions. Necrosis that appears to reduce the
amount of sporulation on lesions is also evident in wheat varieties with horizontal (adult-
plant) resistance to stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis) and Robusta coffee with horizontal
resistance to leaf rust (Hemileia vastatrix).
Recent molecular studies have found that factors controlling general (horizontal) resistance
to potato late blight occur on almost every potato chromosome and have confirmed that this
resistance is, indeed, polygenic (Gebhardt & Valkonen, 2001). Several Quantitative Trait Loci
(QTL) for use in marker assisted breeding for horizontal resistance have been located. The
degree of general resistance observed in the early varieties was often seen to be affected by
environmental factors and the developmental stage of the plant. The well documented
history of general resistance in potatoes allows the conclusion that this resistance has,
indeed, been durable. For example, Thurston (1971) documents the history of the variety
Champion, which was first widely grown in Ireland in 1877 and was clearly popular
because of its resistance to late blight, constituting 70% of the potato plantings in 1898. In
1953 Muller & Haigh reported that Champion still had a very high level of resistance.
However, following the discovery of the R genes in S. demissum and their transfer into S.
tuberosum ssp. tuberosum, as Thurston (1971) commented, For several decades, almost all
potato breeders dropped their work on general resistance and concentrated on obtaining
commercial potato varieties with R-genes. Following the failure of R genes to provide long-
term resistance, potato breeders turned back to horizontal resistance (Toxopeus, 1964). Van
der Plank (1971) documented the fact that six potato varieties released without R genes in
the 1920s and 1930s maintained their resistance rating of 6-9 (on a scale of 3=very
susceptible to 10=very resistant) over a 30-year period from 1938 to 1968. Black (1970)
showed that such resistance could be accumulated rapidly through crossing and selecting
appropriate resistant material. In fact, Black turned back to S. demissum as a source of
horizontal resistance, maintaining that it was mainly horizontal resistance that protected the
wild potato species from Ph. infestans in Mexico. He showed that by crossing and selecting
agronomically useful potato varieties in the presence of late blight, high levels of horizontal
resistance could be accumulated. He established that the crossing of two moderately
resistant varieties could result in some highly resistant progeny (due to transgressive
342 Plant Pathology
segregation). As he said, it is possible for two resisters --- to possess different resistance
factors, and thereby to produce on hybridization a proportion of seedlings of greater
resistance than either parent. In fact, Blacks 1970 paper is a compact manual for breeding
for horizontal resistance. It shows how easy breeding for a quantitative character can be,
involving steady accumulation of resistance rather than the game of snakes and ladders
associated with breeding for vertical resistance. It avoids the bewildering work of collecting,
identifying and naming new pathogen races, and involves working on races only to the
extent that inoculation of test plots must be done with pathogen races that have virulence on
all the vertical resistance genes that occur in the parent plants.
400-year separation from the rust, resulting in a destructive epidemic when the pathogen
was eventually introduced. In fact, P. polysora was barely mentioned in the plant pathology
literature before it became destructive on maize in Africa. The pathogen spread eastward
across Africa and into Southeast Asia and Melanesia. However, the destructiveness of the
disease declined after the initial epidemic (Cammack, 1960), and now throughout this
extended range it is regarded as of little importance although it can be found on most maize
plants. It is evident that selection by farmers of resistant types from genetically variable
populations, as has been done since time immemorial in America, resulted in rapid
accumulation of horizontal resistance to P. polysora in African and Asian maize populations.
Farmers would have selected seed preferentially from the resistant survivors of the
epidemic; often they would have had no choice since highly susceptible genotypes were
killed (Harlan, 1976) or would not have produced much seed. Van der Plank (1968) and
Robinson (1976) argued that this experience showed how rapidly and effectively adequate
levels of horizontal resistance could be accumulated by bulk selection from genetically
diverse crop populations. In contrast to what happened on the farms, researchers
conducting seedling tests concluded that there was no resistance in African maize. They
were looking for vertical resistance. They were looking for genes for resistance (Stanton &
Cammak, 1953).
altitudes. Following the introduction of C. canephora to Java in 1900 after the devastation of
Arabica coffee by rust, the Robusta variety showed high levels of resistance, which has been
maintained and even increased by selection and breeding to the present time (Kushalappa &
Eskes, 1989). On trees in Indonesia, older leaves commonly have some lesions, but these
never cover the leaves and they never appear to cause premature defoliation. No one seems
concerned about the disease. The resistance is partial, is quantitatively inherited, and has
been stable over a very long time; there are no reports of a sudden destructive upsurge of
rust on the lowland species. It is horizontal resistance. Like the horizontal resistance of
potato to P. infestans, it is associated with necrosis of large areas of tissue which appears to
limit sporulation. This resistance has played a big part in the management of rust in Arabica
coffee in recent decades (Kushalappa & Eskes, 1989). The horizontal resistance of Robusta
coffee was incorporated into Arabica coffee in a rare hybridization between the tetraploid,
self-compatible C. arabica and the diploid, cross-pollinated C. canephora, discovered in 1927
in East Timor (Rodrigues, 1984) where plantings of highlands Arabica coffee overlapped
with plantings of the lowlands Robusta coffee. Tetraploid progeny of this hybridization
were selected as Hibrido de Timor and planted widely as a rust resistant Arabica flavor
type in East Timor. Later in Brazil, the compact high quality variety Caturra was crossed
with the Timor hybrid to produce the agronomically acceptable Catimor lines of Arabica
coffee with the flavor of Arabica and the rust resistance of Robusta (Rodrigues, 1984).
Catimor lines are now grown widely around the world to manage rust, apparently without
any catastrophic loss of resistance. Similar types of full flavoured, rust-resistant coffee,
known as Arabusta coffee, presumably of a similar origin, are now grown commercially in
Indonesia (e.g. in the Toraja region of South Sulawesi). Moreno-Ruiz & Castillo-Zapata
(1990) have described in detail the development of the rust resistant, compact variety
Colombia from Hibrido de Timor in Colombia.
Arabica coffee can still be found growing wild and semi-domesticated in the highlands of
Ethiopia, where it and the rust co-evolved. Here we can see the ecology of a crop species
and its co-evolved pathogen in wild, ancestral communities of the species. It is evident that
the wild coffee forests consist of a mixture of genotypes with different resistance genes, and
probably types with a moderate degree of horizontal resistance, such that coffee rust is not
seen as being epidemic there, certainly not to the extent seen in commercial Arabica coffee
plantations in various countries since the 1870s (van der Graaff, 1986).
the plant tops may collapse and die before maturity. There is variation in the pathogenicity
of isolates of the pathogen; some weakly pathogenic types can form lesions on cotyledons
and leaves but not stem cankers while highly pathogenic types progress to form damaging
stem cankers. The latter predominate in Australia and selection of disease resistance was
essential for the survival of the crop.
Salisbury and co-workers selected horizontal resistance to blackleg by exposing a wide
range of canola genotypes to the pathogen in nursery plots heavily contaminated with
infested crop residues. The more resistant types survived the blackleg epidemics that
developed and were selected for further breeding work. These had mature plant resistance
which was evidently inherited polygenically. The resistance was partial: the pathogen
invaded and colonized the cotyledons and leaves of resistant types but stem cankering was
reduced or eliminated, although under heavy disease pressure, the resistant types could still
suffer significant amounts of disease. Continued improvement in resistance was achieved by
crossing of partially resistant types and further selection using the same method of field
testing (Salisbury, 1988), with the result that the canola varieties produced had the highest
levels of blackleg resistance of any spring canola varieties in the world and when these
were grown with appropriate cultural control measures, losses were negligible. In this initial
work little attention appears to have been paid to pathogen races even though it was known
that the fungus reproduced sexually and was highly variable. It was not necessary to do so.
In a disease such as blackleg, it is possible to imagine that any plant characters associated
with strengthening of the stem base may well contribute to resistance or tolerance to the
disease; a stronger stem may be less liable to invasion by the fungus, and, if invaded, may be
less liable to collapse leading to the death of the plant. This is the sort of resistance seen in
many plant species to weak pathogens such as Pythium: as tissues of the hypocotyl and
lower stem mature, they become completely resistant simply by dint of their increased
mechanical strength.
There are many lessons to be learned from this work. Firstly, inoculations of seedlings in a
glasshouse gave different results than field tests. Later Salisbury & Ballinger (1996) showed
that the resistance of seedlings tested in a glasshouse and of developing plants tested in the
nursery plots were under different genetic control. The resistance evident in the blackleg
nurseries was effective in the field. The basis for the success of this work was the field
testing of resistance against the prevailing races of the highly variable fungus. There is
evidence that this resistance can be eroded over time under severe disease pressure
(Salisbury et al., 1995), but it has been relatively stable and subject to steady improvement in
breeding programs. There has been no spectacular breakdown. In stark contrast, when in a
separate program several varieties with vertical resistance (immunity expressed as
hypersensitive necrosis) to the disease, controlled by a single dominant resistance gene bred
into canola from a related species, Brassica rapa ssp. sylvestris, were released, the resistance
broke down within three years (Sprague et al., 2006). Races of the pathogen virulent on these
resistant varieties were selected from among the highly variable L. maculans population.
Researchers then had to worry about the races of the pathogen and its high variability.
It appears that these vertically resistant varieties had been developed without a background
of the horizontal resistance selected by Salisbury. When the resistance broke down, disease
severity (measured as percent of the stem cross section blackened) was very high in the
varieties with vertical resistance compared with nearby older varieties with only horizontal
346 Plant Pathology
resistance. The availability of varieties with immunity gave the farmers a false sense of
security and encouraged them to plant the crop more intensively than previously, placing
immense selective pressure on the pathogen. It is clear that the management of this disease
in the future should rely on the horizontal resistance selected in the 1970s and since built up
by regular crossing and selection among resistant varieties, combined with cultural control
measures such as crop rotation and separation of new plantings from the previous crops
(Marcroft et al., 2004). If vertical resistance is used, it must be added to a background of
horizontal resistance. If there is evidence of erosion of horizontal resistance, this can be
addressed by a program of steady improvement in resistance as practiced during the 1980s.
identified vertical resistance genes. The relatively long-lived popularity of the Federation-
type wheats may indicate that, although they were regarded as being susceptible to stem
rust, they may have had a degree of horizontal resistance that enabled them to continue to
yield well and remain popular with farmers. The fact that they had short, stiff straw could
have contributed to this. Farrer had been aware that varieties with erect, stiffer leaves
tended to suffer less rust infection. He attempted to combine the (partial) rust resistance of
late maturing varieties with earliness (Guthrie, 1922). His methods showed an awareness of
quantitative genetics and what is now called transgressive segregation. While it is often
stated that he did not develop rust-resistant varieties, this assessment is usually made
through the lens of vertical resistance that came to dominate breeding for stem rust
resistance in Australia after his death. One of his varieties, Bomen, was still regarded as a
valuable variety in the rust-prone northern districts of New South Wales in the early 1920s,
and in fact won a Royal Agricultural Society prize for the best crop in 1921 when stem rust
was a serious problem (Guthrie, 1922). It is possible that, given his breeding intentions and
his methods of selecting for quantitative characters, Farrer did select a degree of horizontal
resistance which underpinned the evident longevity of some of his varieties. After his death,
his methods which favored the selection of horizontal resistance were replaced by the
selection of the Mendelian genes for vertical resistance which has continued to dominate
wheat breeding to the present time.
As discussed above for Australia (Watson and Luig, 1963; Table 1) and summarized for
North America and Kenya by Person (1967), the use of vertical resistance to control wheat
stem rust up until about 1960 resulted in the rapid breakdown of resistance as new races in
the rust population adapted to the successive deployment of one or two resistance genes in
particular varieties of wheat. This resistance broke down rapidly in Australia and Kenya
(within about 5 years), and was also lost in North America, although there it was longer-
lived (being effective for more than 10 years in some of the most important varieties). The
breeding and deployment of vertical resistance involved a massive effort in surveying the
races in the rust populations as the researchers attempted to keep track of the adaptation of
the rust to the new varieties, producing bewildering lists of races. In fact, trying to review
the race changes in the rust populations is truly confusing, as noted by Waterhouse (1952).
The race names bear no relationship to the resistance genes they are matching, but rather are
named after the pattern of virulence shown on sets of differential varieties with different
resistance genes (McIntosh et al., 1995). Only the fully initiated can easily keep track of the
virulence genes that are being expressed in the rust populations. Van der Plank (1983)
criticized the current concept of a pathogen race as stretching the bounds of taxonomic
practice. If a new resistance gene is found in a host, the number of possible pathogen races
increases exponentially (following Flors gene-for-gene hypothesis, the potential number of
races is 2 to the power of the number of resistance genes) and the previously described races
have to be re-described to include their virulence on the new gene. Each race has a unique
set of characteristics which consists of its virulence, its aggressiveness, and its overall fitness
to survive in the environment (Luig, 1983); together these characteristics contribute to its
ability to cause epidemics and so each race has to have a taxonomic identifier of some sort.
For example, the most common races in Canada during the 1920s had a longer uredinial
period on standard varieties than the less common races (Newton et al., 1932), and this trait
would have contributed to their survival in the rust population. The two major races of stem
rust in North America from the 1930s to the 1960s, race 56 and race 15B, differed greatly in
Horizontal or Generalized Resistance to Pathogens in Plants 349
their aggressiveness as well as their virulence (Katsuya & Green, 1967). On varieties on
which both races were virulent, race 56 gave a higher number of infections per unit amount
of inoculum, especially at higher temperatures (20-25oC), and had a 2-day shorter latent
period than race 15B. Uredinia of race 56 expanded faster although race 15B ultimately had
larger uredinia, and race 56 produced more spores per uredinium than race 15B. These
differences are important characteristics of the races. They indicate variation in the ability of
the races to invade a plant after basic compatibility has been established, equivalent to
variation in horizontal resistance in the plants.
In Australia, relatively stable control of the rust in the most rust-prone areas of northern
New South Wales and southern Queensland was achieved after about 1960 by assembling
combinations of several resistance genes (up to five) in particular varieties so that mutants
virulent for one or two genes were still blocked by other unmatched resistance genes
(Watson, 1970; McIntosh, 1976; Park, 2007). It was also considered that races with multiple
virulences were likely to be less fit than races with simple virulence (Flor, 1956; van der
Plank, 1968; Leonard, 1969), and so were unlikely to build up rapidly in the rust population
(Watson, 1970). The release of varieties with just one or two resistance genes was avoided so
that the rust was denied possible stepping stones for developing full virulence on the
varieties with several resistance genes. However, even some of the multiple resistances
broke down - e.g. Sr7a, Sr11, Sr17, Sr36 in the variety Mendos (Luig, 1983; Park, 2007), and
Sr5, Sr6, Sr8, Sr12 in the variety Oxley (Luig, 1983). However, the strategy was largely
successful and McIntosh (1976) was able to conclude that The sacrifice for almost 35 years
of rust resistance has been a regular turnover of cultivars and the loss of effectiveness of a
number of resistance genes. Park (2007) considered that particular combinations of genes
such as Sr2, Sr24 and Sr26 had been particularly effective. The success was built on a
constant effort in surveying the occurrence of rust races and breeding of new varieties with
appropriate resistance genes.
There was a general view among wheat pathologists and breeders that horizontal resistance
to stem rust was uncommon in bread wheats (Watson, 1974) or yet to be clearly
demonstrated (Knott, 1971), and that it was less likely to have been accumulated over time
in the inbreeding crops like wheat than in an outbreeding crop like maize (van der Plank,
1968; Knott 1971). However, Knott (1968) acknowledged the importance of the resistance of
Hope and H-44 which can be considered to show horizontal resistance. Scraps of evidence
of horizontal resistance can be seen in the early preoccupation with vertical resistance. For
example, of the group of varieties with Sr11 involved in the second breakdown of resistance
noted in Australia (Table 1), Waterhouse (1952) ranked Gabo as being more resistant than
Yalta, both of which had Sr11. After the breakdown of the Sr11 resistance, Yalta was rapidly
eliminated from the rust liable areas of New South Wales while Gabo, being somewhat less
susceptible was still grown successfully (Watson, 1958). It is likely that Gabo had a greater
degree of horizontal resistance than Yalta. It was generally known that there were
potentially useful forms of resistance other than the vertical resistance expressed as
hypersensitivity. Watson (1958) recognized the potential of what he called the
morphological resistance in Webster that had been transferred into the variety Fedweb
and had remained effective against all local races of stem rust. In fact, the resistance of
Fedweb lasted from 1938 to 1964 (Park, 2007). Watson (1974) recognized that there were two
known types of non-specific resistance that had been transferred into bread wheat (Triticum
aestivum) from other wheat species. Resistance from T. turgidum var. dicoccum (Yaroslav
350 Plant Pathology
Emmer) had been transferred into the varieties Hope and Renown, and from T. turgidum
var. durum (Iumillo) into the famous variety Thatcher. These resistances appeared to be
controlled mainly by single genes, but Watson thought there were other unidentified genes
involved. Watson (1974) thought non-specific resistance (presumably from the above
sources) had performed well in the cultivars Warigo and Selkirk in the 1973-74 wheat stem
rust epidemic in Australia. Warigo had been an exceptional variety during the period of
repeated release and breakdown of varieties with single resistance genes (1938 1960;
Table 1). Released in 1943 and known to have Sr17 (a recessive resistance; McIntosh et al.,
1995), its resistance lasted an exceptional 16 years until 1959 (Park, 2007). It had Yaroslav
Emmer in its parentage and Watson (1974) assumed that this was part of its success. Now
it is known also to contain Sr2, another recessive gene from Yaroslav Emmer that has
conferred durable resistance on many varieties (McIntosh et al., 1995). Rees et al. (1979)
documented a wide range of horizontal resistance in wheat varieties including some of
the older ones used in Australia.
In North America there were two spectacular resistance breakdowns leading to major
epidemics in 1935 (associated with the coming to dominance in the rust population of race
56) and 1954 (associated with the dominance of race 15B) (Person, 1967), but it appears that
stem rust was generally controlled, except for these two major epidemics, through the use of
multiple resistance genes (e.g. Thatcher had Sr5, Sr9g, Sr12 and Sr16; Kolmer et al., 2011;
Luig, 1983), and incorporation into the background of many varieties of the horizontal
resistance (referred to as adult plant resistance) derived from tetraploid wheats (Hare &
McIntosh, 1979). The resistance of Hope (with resistance from Yaroslav Emmer) and
Thatcher (with resistance from Iumillo) may have helped to partly protect the spring wheat
crops in North America during the severe epidemic of 1954. Selkirk, which became the
leading spring wheat variety after the 1954 epidemic, had six identified resistance genes
(Sr2, Sr6, Sr7b, Sr9d, Sr17, Sr23; Luig, 1983), including Sr2 and Sr17, the two identified
recessive genes from Yaroslav Emmer. The evidence that the main North American varieties
may have had a degree of horizontal resistance could also account for the longevity of the
vertical resistance of these varieties from 1935 through to the 1960s. Certainly, Stakman &
Christensen (1960) recognized the occurrence of important levels of resistance in wheat
varieties that were susceptible at the seedling stage. It was noted during the stem rust
epidemic of 1954 that the amount of damage on the durum wheat variety Stewart was three
times that on the bread wheat variety Lee, and this was attributed to the earliness and non-
specific resistance of Lee (Loegering et al., 1967).
The ability of cereals to slow down the development of rusts, even though the plants were
considered basically susceptible, was recognized by pre-eminent breeders and pathologists
many years ago (Farrer, 1898; Stakman & Harrar, 1957). A famous early example was the oat
species Avena byzantina known as Red Rustproof, which was introduced to the southern
United States and recognized as being resistant to crown rust (Puccinia coronata) in the 1860s
(Luke et al., 1972). It was partially resistant, not immune, and has remained so for over 100
years. It is late-rusting. It is also slow-rusting, expressed as a low percent of leaf area
infected during the growing season. The degree of resistance varies between varieties of the
species. Luke et al. (1972) had no hesitation in recognizing this as horizontal resistance.
They were also inclined to call it generalized resistance. Wilcoxson (1981) comprehensively
reviewed the biology of slow rusting in cereals and discussed the evidence for long-lived,
slow-rusting against stem rust in some well known wheat varieties such as Lee,
Horizontal or Generalized Resistance to Pathogens in Plants 351
McMurachy, Kenya 58, Thatcher and Idaed 59. In crosses between fast- and slow-rusting
varieties, Skovmand et al. (1978) showed that transgressive segregation occurred in all
crosses, and that slow-rusting was quantitatively inherited with a narrow-sense heritability
of 80%. In Europe, farmers and plant breeders over many years used a satisfactory level of
horizontal (partial) resistance to protect spring barley against leaf rust (Puccinia
hordei)(Parlevliet, 1981). Slow rusting in cereals generally involved decreased frequency of
penetration, slower invasion of host tissue, longer latent period, smaller pustules, lower
sporulation rate, and shorter period of sporulation, singly or, more commonly, in
combination (Kuhn et al., 1978; Parlevliet, 1979). The detailed physiology of these effects is
not understood, but early workers determined that some physical features of cereals could
affect rust development. For example, Hursh (1924) found evidence that the proportion of
sclerenchyma to collenchyma in the upper peduncle was correlated with the resistance to
stem rust of Sonem Emmer and Kota wheat compared with Little Club. Horizontal
resistance, being partial, is strongly affected by environmental factors. It has long been
known that excessive nitrogenous fertilization makes cereals more susceptible to rusts
(Hursh, 1924). Hart (1931) showed that Webster had several morphological features that
increased its resistance to stem rust compared with very susceptible varieties. These
included a higher proportion of sclerenchyma in the peduncle and the degree of lignification
and relative toughness of the epidermis which often prevented uredinia breaking through to
the surface. The resistance in Webster has since been attributed to the gene Sr30, which has
been overcome in the Australian variety Festiguay (Knott & McIntosh, 1978). However, it is
unlikely that the set of morphological features that inhibit rust infection in Webster (Hart,
1931) is controlled by only one gene.
The known sources of horizontal resistance (often referred to as adult plant resistance or
durable resistance) against stem rust in wheat are very narrow, consisting mainly of the
two tetraploid wheats, T. turgidum var. dicoccum (cv. Yaroslav Emmer) and T. turgidum
var. durum (cv. Iumillo) and the bread wheat variety Webster (McIntosh et al., 1995).
Leppik (1970) lists a range of wild wheat species discovered through the activities of the
Russian collecting expeditions that are possible sources of resistance. An unfortunate
downside of the spread of dwarf wheat varieties around the world from the 1960s has
been the loss of the genetic diversity in the local land races that had probably undergone
selection for horizontal resistance. But building up horizontal resistance in a crop does not
necessarily involve just searching for sources of resistance, but rather crossing and
selection of existing varieties in such as way that genes involved in the normal
functioning of the plant that happen to interfere with pathogen growth and development
are accumulated and resistance is built up.
Stripe (yellow) rust (Puccinia striiformis) was first detected in Australia in 1979 and its history
of control by resistance has been very different from that of stem rust. The first response to
the incursion, which caused heavy losses in some of the most widely grown varieties such
as Zenith, was to deploy vertical resistance genes (YrA and Yr6). However, the effectiveness
of these genes was lost very rapidly (Wellings & McIntosh, 1990). It was observed that some
wheat varieties such as Condor, Egret and Olympic, although clearly susceptible at the
seedling stage, showed varying degrees of adult-plant resistance and suffered much lower
losses than the very susceptible varieties such as Zenith (McIntosh & Wellings, 1986). These
had similar temperature-sensitive, partial, adult-plant resistance to that observed in some
prominent varieties such as Cappelle-Desprez in Europe (Johnson, 1978), and Gaines,
352 Plant Pathology
Nugaines and Luke in the Pacific Northwest of the United States (Milus & Line, 1986). The
degree of resistance increased as the plants matured, and was greater at higher than lower
temperatures (Qayoum & Line, 1985). The resistance was quantitatively inherited, and some
crosses showed transgressive segregation (Milus & Line, 1986). This resistance has been
long-lived. In Australia, it has been incorporated into many varieties (e.g. Meering and its
successors, developed from Condor) and has proved to give long-lasting resistance to stripe
rust (Park & Rees, 1989). While it has been identified with Yr18 (McIntosh et al., 1995),
additive genes have also been found (Park, 2008) and it has been attributed to a Y18
complex (Ma & Singh, 1996). It is therefore evident that control of stripe rust has relied
largely on horizontal resistance.
With the emergence of race Ug99 and its derivatives, virulent on several important Sr
genes (Sr24, Sr36, Sr21, Sr31, Sr38) that have been widely distributed around the world
from the CIMMYT program in Mexico, wheat breeders are considering turning back to
horizontal resistance to control stem rust (Schumann & Leonard, 2011). The emergence of
this race has shown the dangers of relying on vertical resistance while steadily eroding
the diversity of the global genetic resources of a crop. Before central agencies distributed
and promoted particular wheat genotypes around the world, there would have been
much greater genetic diversity in the crops. From country to country, from valley to
valley and from farmer to farmer there would have been variation in the planting
material, including variation in the deployment of resistance genes. An epidemic in one
area would not necessarily have threatened another area. With the centralization of
breeding for rust resistance in crops such as wheat and the influence of central agencies
like CIMMYT in distributing resistance genes, there has been a global narrowing in the
base of vertical resistance, such that new races originating in East Africa can threaten the
wheat crops of many countries. In fact, it is likely that the global varieties have steadily
replaced the local landraces that, in the absence of vertical resistance, probably relied on
horizontal resistance to survive and yield in the face of rust infection. Further, the
destructive nature of race Ug99 in East Africa suggests that the varieties it is attacking
have little horizontal resistance. From the emphasis placed on vertical resistance in wheat
breeding (the perpetual search for resistance genes), it is highly likely that horizontal
resistance has not been maintained at a high level in the major wheat varieties, in stark
contrast to the situation in maize.
plants (e.g. Tingey, 1979). In response to insect attack, solanaceous plants produce
proteinase inhibitors that enhance their resistance to insects (Heath et al., 1997). Most of
these traits are likely to be inherited quantitatively (Yencho et al., 2000). Also, like horizontal
resistance to plant pathogens, they are liable to erosion if the insect population is able to
adapt to particular mechanisms. Thus, many secondary plant compounds that probably
initially conditioned resistance to particular insects have become specific attractants for
insects that have adapted to their presence. This process has been especially evident in
relation to the glucosinolates in the Brassicaceae (Hopkins et al., 2009).
8. Conclusion
Our personal experience conditions how we see the world, including the world of science
with which we work. van der Plank (1963) developed his ideas from life-long experience of
breeding for resistance to late blight in potato, in which R genes were not effective. They
broke down rapidly. Breeding for resistance to late blight relied more on horizontal
resistance, and van der Plank was impressed by horizontal resistance. Workers with wheat
stem rust grew up with direct personal experience of one of the great biological phenomena
discovered in our time, vertical resistance involving the gene-for-gene recognition of a plant
species and its co-evolved parasite. This resistance was genetically simple and made a
spectacular difference; addition of a single Mendelian gene could convert a very susceptible
variety into an immune one and completely protect a crop that had suffered regular
devastating epidemics down through history. It is no wonder that researchers were excited
by it and worked so hard to exploit it. Even the breakdown of resistance with which they
had to contend was such a striking phenomenon, with incredible practical importance on
the farms, that this only added to the excitement of the endeavor; researchers not only had
to track the resistance genes in the host but also the virulence genes in the pathogen. All the
emphasis was placed on making vertical resistance work, with considerable success in the
case of wheat stem rust through breeding several resistance genes into each variety, keeping
track of virulence changes in the rust populations, and continuously breeding varieties with
new resistance genes. Horizontal resistance to wheat rusts was paid little attention during
the grand quest to make vertical resistance work in practice. The inbreeding nature of wheat
and the other small grain cereals made it harder to accumulate horizontal resistance as
occurred in some outbreeding crops such as maize and cocoa. As a consequence, the
researchers involved were not enthusiastic about van der Planks synthesis and many
continue to ignore his insights. The present author, introduced to plant pathology through
study of vascular streak dieback of cocoa in Papua New Guinea and Southeast Asia, saw the
functioning and value of horizontal resistance at first hand. It was easily selected for in an
outbreeding, genetically diverse crop exposed to severe epidemics. Indeed, resistance was
selected by farmers and agronomists before the cause of the disease was known. Although
the pathogen reproduces only sexually and is therefore likely to be highly variable, it has
not been necessary, and indeed the biology of the fungus has made it impossible, to be
concerned about races. It has proved durable, protecting cocoa from a potentially
devastating pathogen and allowing the region to develop over 50 years into the second most
important cocoa producing region after West Africa. As a result, this author has been
impressed by van der Planks concept of horizontal resistance.
Long ago, the father of the early work on vertical resistance in the cereals, E.C. Stakman
(1957, 1958, 1964), called for greater use of horizontal resistance against cereal rusts. Hooker
(1967) suggested that, in developing disease resistance in crops, perhaps man did not
properly assess the resources at his disposal or employed the wrong tactics in their usage.
In the light of his experience with the maize rusts he concluded that If the system
prevailing in maize and maize rust is applicable to other host-pathogen systems, then genes
for specific hypersensitive-based resistance should be avoided or used only as a minor
supplement to a high level of generalized resistance. As many modes of generalized
resistance as possible should be combined to produce multimodal resistant varieties. In van
der Planks (1968) and Robinsons (1979) terms, horizontal resistance should be built up in
crops as a primary objective and as the foundation of disease management, with vertical
356 Plant Pathology
resistance being added as necessary, along with cultural control measures and targeted use
of pesticides, as part of an IPM strategy.
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