208 resultados para Colletotrichum gloeosporoides
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Fungi are disease-causing agents in plants and affect crops of economic importance. One control method is to induce resistance in the host by using biological control with hypovirulent phytopathogenic fungi. Here, we report the detection of a mycovirus in a strain of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides causing anthracnose of cashew tree. The strain C. gloeosporioides URM 4903 was isolated from a cashew tree (Anacardium occidentale) in Igarassu, PE, Brazil. After nucleic acid extraction and electrophoresis, the band corresponding to a possible double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) was purified by cellulose column chromatography. Nine extrachromosomal bands were obtained. Enzymatic digestion with DNAse I and Nuclease S1 had no effect on these bands, indicating their dsRNA nature. Transmission electron microscopic examination of extracts from this strain showed the presence of isometric particles (30-35 nm in diameter). These data strongly suggest the infection of this C. gloeosporioides strain by a dsRNA mycovirus. Once the hypovirulence of this strain is confirmed, the strain may be used for the biological control of cashew anthracnose.
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Generation means was used to study the mode of inheritance of resistance to anthracnose stalk rot in tropical maize. Each population was comprised of six generations in two trials under a randomized block design. Inoculations were performed using a suspension of 105 conidia mL(-1) applied into the stalk. Internal lesion length was directly measured by opening the stalk thirty days after inoculation. Results indicated contrasting modes of inheritance. In one population, dominant gene effects predominated. Besides, additive x dominant and additive x additive interactions were also found. Intermediate values of heritability indicated a complex resistance inheritance probably conditioned by several genes of small effects. An additive-dominant genetic model sufficed to explain the variation in the second population, where additive gene effects predominated. Few genes of major effects control disease resistance in this cross. Heterosis widely differed between populations, which can be attributed to the genetic background of the parental resistant lines.
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O fungo Colletotrichum gossypii var. cephalosporioides, agente causal da ramulose do algodoeiro, é transmitido pela semente que se constitui em uma das mais importantes fontes de inóculo inicial e de introdução da doença em áreas indenes. Para que se possa identificar sua presença em lotes de sementes, é importante que se empreguem métodos de detecção rápidos e seguros. O mais empregado é o do papel de filtro, que se baseia na avaliação de sinais do patógeno desenvolvidos sobre as sementes, seguida da sua identificação morfológica. O método apresenta a desvantagem do crescimento das plântulas no período de incubação das sementes que pode favorecer o desenvolvimento de outros fungos e prejudicar a caracterização do patógeno. Para minimizar este problema vem sendo empregada a técnica da restrição hídrica. O presente trabalho teve como objetivo avaliar o efeito de três solutos em dois potenciais osmóticos, comparados ao tratamento padrão de água destilada, ao congelamento e ao 2,4 D, sobre a germinação, comprimento da radícula e detecção do agente causal da ramulose, durante o teste de sanidade. Os solutos Manitol e NaCl foram mais eficientes em inibir a germinação e favorecer a incidência do patógeno no potencial osmótico de -0,8 MPa. O KCl mostrou-se eficiente em inibir a germinação nos dois potenciais osmóticos testados, -0,6 e -0,8 MPa, porém reduziu a incidência do patógeno no potencial de -0,8 MPa. Os solutos Manitol, nos potenciais osmóticos de -0,8 e -0,6 MPa e o NaCl no potencial osmótico de -0,8 foram eficientes em reduzir o comprimento da radícula, sem interferir negativamente nos níveis de detecção de C. gossypii var. cephalosporioides, podendo ser recomendados para uso em análises sanitárias de rotina.
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Von Dr. R. Laubert
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A nonpathogenic mutant of Colletotrichum magna (path-1) was previously shown to protect watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) and cucumber (Cucumis sativus) seedlings from anthracnose disease elicited by wild-type C. magna. Disease protection was observed in stems of path-1-colonized cucurbits but not in cotyledons, indicating that path-1 conferred tissue-specific and/or localized protection. Plant biochemical indicators of a localized and systemic (peroxidase, phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, lignin, and salicylic acid) “plant-defense” response were investigated in anthracnose-resistant and -susceptible cultivars of cucurbit seedlings exposed to four treatments: (1) water (control), (2) path-1 conidia, (3) wild-type conidia, and (4) challenge conditions (inoculation into path-1 conidia for 48 h and then exposure to wild-type conidia). Collectively, these analyses indicated that disease protection in path-1-colonized plants was correlated with the ability of these plants to mount a defense response more rapidly and to equal or greater levels than plants exposed to wild-type C. magna alone. Watermelon plants colonized with path-1 were also protected against disease caused by Colletotrichum orbiculare and Fusarium oxysporum. A model based on the kinetics of plant-defense activation is presented to explain the mechanism of path-1-conferred disease protection.
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A cDNA corresponding to a transcript induced in culture by N starvation, was identified in Colletotrichum gloeosporioides by a differential hybridisation strategy. The cDNA comprised 905 bp and predicted a 215 aa protein; the gene encoding the cDNA was termed CgDN24. No function for CgDN24 could be predicted by database homology searches using the cDNA sequence and no homologues were found in the sequenced fungal genomes. Transcripts of CgDN24 were detected in infected leaves of Stylosanthes guianensis at stages of infection that corresponded with symptom development. The CgDN24 gene was disrupted by homologous recombination and this led to reduced radial growth rates and the production of hyphae with a hyperbranching phenotype. Normal sporutation was observed, and following conidia inoculation of S. guianensis, normal disease development was obtained. These results demonstrate that CgDN24 is necessary for normal hyphal development in axenic culture but dispensable for phytopathogenicity. (c) 2005 Elsevier GmbH. Alt rights reserved.
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Anthracnose, caused by Colletotrichum trifolii, is one of the most serious diseases influencing lucerne persistence and productivity in eastern Australia. The disease is largely controlled by plant resistance; however, new pathotypes of C. trifolii have developed in Australia, seriously limiting the productive life of susceptible cultivars. This paper describes an incompletely recessive and quantitatively inherited resistance to C. trifolii identified in a clone (W116) from cv. Sequel. S-1, F-1, F-2 and backcross populations of W116 and D (highly susceptible clone) were studied for their reaction to C. trifolii race 1. Resistance was found to be quantitatively inherited, and quantitative trait loci associated with resistance and susceptibility were identified in a backcross population (D x W116) x D using random amplified polymorphic DNA and amplified fragment length polymorphic markers. A multi-locus region on linkage group 4 was found to contribute significantly to the resistance phenotype. The application of DNA markers to allow exploitation of this quantitatively inherited resistance in lucerne breeding is discussed.
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Forty-four species of Colletotrichum are confirmed as present in Australia based on DNA sequencing analyses. Many of these species were identified directly as a result of two workshops organised by the Subcommittee on Plant Health Diagnostics in Australia in 2015 that covered morphological and molecular approaches to identification of Colletotrichum. There are several other species of Colletotrichum reported from Australia that remain to be substantiated by DNA sequence-based methods. This body of work aims to provide a basis from which to critically examine a number of isolates of Colletotrichum deposited in Australian culture collections.
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2015
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2015
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Este trabalho teve como objetivo avaliar o efeito da temperatura na infecção de Colletotrichum gloeosporioides em cebola. Mudas de cebola, da variedade Alfa São Francisco, foram inoculadas numa suspensão de esporos, na concentração de 105 esporos/mL até o ponto de escorrimento. Após a inoculação, as mudas foram cobertas com saco plástico preto umedecido, vedado próximo à base dos vasos, por 24 horas, para simular o período de molhamento do campo, e mantidas em estufas sob as temperaturas de 15 oC, 20 oC, 25 oC, 30 oC, 35 oC e 40 oC. Foi determinada a severidade da doença considerando-se a porcentagem da área foliar com sintomas. As variáveis significativas no teste F da análise de variância foram submetidas à análise de regressão. A elevação da temperatura propiciou aumento na severidade da antracnose da cebola.
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2015
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O objetivo do trabalho foi avaliar o efeito dos óleos essenciais de manjericão (MA), capim-limão, sálvia, tomilho e citronela, nas concentrações de 1.000 ppm e 2.000 ppm, na qualidade fisiológica de sementes de cebola cv. Beta Cristal e na germinação de conídios de Colletotrichum gloeosporioides f. sp. cepae.