993 resultados para Fungus Rhizoctonia-solani
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Rhizoctonia solani isolates collected from different crops in northeast India belonged to anastomosis group AG 2-2 IIIB (Canavalia ensiformis, Sechium edule, Glycine max and Dolichos lablab). AG 11A was detected on Zea mays, Rhizoctonia solani on Sechium edule and AG 4HG-II on a weed, Galinsoga parviflora, which are new records from India. © Australasian Plant thology ociety 2010.
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Fungi constitute an important part of the soil ecosystem, playing key roles in decomposition, cycling processes, and biotic interactions. Molecular methods have been used to assess fungal communities giving a more realistic view of their diversity. For this purpose, total DNA was extracted from bulk soils cultivated with tomato (STC), vegetables (SHC), and native forest (SMS) from three sites of the Taquara Branca river basin in Sumaré County, São Paulo State, Brazil. This metagenomic DNA was used as a template to amplify fungal 18S rDNA sequences, and libraries were constructed in Escherichia coli by cloning PCR products. The plasmid inserts were sequenced and compared to known rDNA sequences in the GenBank database. Of the sequenced clones, 22 were obtained from the SMS sample, 18 from the SHC sample, and 6 from the STC sample. Although most of the clone sequences did not match the sequences present in the database, individual amplified sequences matched with Glomeromycota (SMS), Fungi incertae sedis (SMS), and Neocallimastigomycota (SHC). Most of the sequences from the amplified taxa represent uncultured fungi. The molecular analysis of variance (AMOVA) indicated that fluctuations observed of haplotypes in the composition may be related to herbicide application. © 2013 Silvana Pompéia Val-Moraes et al.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Proteção de Plantas) - FCA
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During September 2011, post-emergence damping off of Swiss chard (Beta vulgaris subsp. cicla L.) was observed in a greenhouse in Villa del Prado (Spain). About 20% of the seedlings showed damping off symptoms. Lesions were initially water soaked, dark brown necrosis of crown tissue, irregular in shape and sunken in appearance on large plants, causing the infected seedlings to collapse and eventually die. Rhizoctonia solani was isolated consistently from symptomatic plants. After morphological and molecular identification of the isolates, pathogenicity was tested by placing agar plugs of four isolates adjacent to the stem at the three or four true leaf stage. In inoculated plants, brown crown and stem necrosis occurred while control plants did not show disease symptoms. Pathogenicity using non-germinated seeds was also tested. All four isolates produced extensive damping off when inoculated on non-germinated seeds. To our knowledge, this is the first report of damping off of Swiss chard caused by R. solani in Europe.
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M2 is a double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) element occurring in the hypovirulent isolate Rhs 1A1 of the plant pathogenic basidiomycete Rhizoctonia solani. Rhs 1A1 originated as a sector of the virulent field isolate Rhs 1AP, which contains no detectable amount of the M2 dsRNA. The complete sequence (3,570 bp) of the M2 dsRNA has been determined. A 6.9-kbp segment of total DNA from either Rhs 1A1 or Rhs 1AP hybridizes with an M2-specific cDNA probe. The sequences of M2 dsRNA and of PCR products generated from Rhs 1A1 total DNA were found to be identical. Thus this report describes a fungal host containing full-length DNA copies of a dsRNA element. A major portion of the M2 dsRNA is located in the cytoplasm, whereas a smaller amount is found in mitochondria. Based on either the universal or the mitochondrial genetic code of filamentous fungi, one strand of M2 encodes a putative protein of 754 amino acids. The resulting polypeptide has all four motifs of a dsRNA viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RDRP) and is phylogenetically related to the RDRP of a mitochondrial dsRNA associated with hypovirulence in strain NB631 of Cryphonectria parasitica, incitant of chestnut blight. This polypeptide also has significant sequence similarity with two domains of a pentafunctional polypeptide, which catalyzes the five central steps of the shikimate pathway in yeast and filamentous fungi.
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Las enfermedades en tabaco (Nicotiana tabacum L.), causadas por Rhizoctonia solani Künh, y en importancia de prevalencia la podredumbre radicular, son las enfermedades que causan mayores pérdidas en la producción. Cuanto mayor es el conocimiento de todas las características de una epidemia, más completa es la visión de la estructura del comportamiento del patosistema para poder desarrollar estrategias de manejo de la enfermedad. Por ello este trabajo de tesis se planteó diferentes objetivos, determinar la modelización espacial de la enfermedad en las provincias de Salta y Jujuy, obteniendo por geoestadística una distribución agregada en el inicio de la epidemia y aleatoria en con el avance temporal, ajustándose al modelo exponencial, asociado a factores de manejo y ambientales. Asimismo se realizó un análisis de las secuencias de ADNr-ITS, morfología y pruebas de patogenicidad que permitieron la identificación de R. solani AG 4 HG-I, AG 2-1 y AG 4 HG-III como causantes de enfermedad en tabaco en el NOA. En los aislamientos determinados como R.solani, los marcadores ISSR permitieron detectar gran variabilidad genética, la cual estaría influenciada por la existencia de diferentes factores como ser el flujo génico por dispersión de propagulos y las prácticas de manejo. Finalmente el análisis de la dinámica temporal de epidemias permitió interpretar y entender el comportamiento de la enfermedad en diferentes materiales genéticos de tabaco, generando una importante base de información para la toma de decisiones en la generación de una estrategia de manejo de la patología. La información generada contribuye al conocimiento del sistema epidemiológico y recalca la necesidad de encarar estudios que integren a la unidad de producción a un contexto regional, teniendo en cuenta que el patosistema debe ser abordado como parte reconocida de una complejidad biológica intrínseca a la sanidad.
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Las enfermedades en tabaco (Nicotiana tabacum L.), causadas por Rhizoctonia solani Künh, y en importancia de prevalencia la podredumbre radicular, son las enfermedades que causan mayores pérdidas en la producción. Cuanto mayor es el conocimiento de todas las características de una epidemia, más completa es la visión de la estructura del comportamiento del patosistema para poder desarrollar estrategias de manejo de la enfermedad. Por ello este trabajo de tesis se planteó diferentes objetivos, determinar la modelización espacial de la enfermedad en las provincias de Salta y Jujuy, obteniendo por geoestadística una distribución agregada en el inicio de la epidemia y aleatoria en con el avance temporal, ajustándose al modelo exponencial, asociado a factores de manejo y ambientales. Asimismo se realizó un análisis de las secuencias de ADNr-ITS, morfología y pruebas de patogenicidad que permitieron la identificación de R. solani AG 4 HG-I, AG 2-1 y AG 4 HG-III como causantes de enfermedad en tabaco en el NOA. En los aislamientos determinados como R.solani, los marcadores ISSR permitieron detectar gran variabilidad genética, la cual estaría influenciada por la existencia de diferentes factores como ser el flujo génico por dispersión de propagulos y las prácticas de manejo. Finalmente el análisis de la dinámica temporal de epidemias permitió interpretar y entender el comportamiento de la enfermedad en diferentes materiales genéticos de tabaco, generando una importante base de información para la toma de decisiones en la generación de una estrategia de manejo de la patología. La información generada contribuye al conocimiento del sistema epidemiológico y recalca la necesidad de encarar estudios que integren a la unidad de producción a un contexto regional, teniendo en cuenta que el patosistema debe ser abordado como parte reconocida de una complejidad biológica intrínseca a la sanidad.
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Environmental problems caused by synthetic fungicides have increased the search for alternative methods of control of plant diseases. The objective was to evaluate the effect of essential oil of citronella grass, on the fungus Rhizoctonia solani, in different methods of in vitro fungitoxicity. We used a randomized design in a factorial design with four replications, where the factors were composed of four methods for assessing the in vitro fungitoxicity of the essential oil of citronella grass (essential oil diluted in Tween 80 (0.5%) and embedded in the culture medium PDA (potato dextrose agar) still melting, essential oil diluted in Tween 80 (0.5%) and distributed on the surface of the PDA; oil essential diluted in Tween 80 (0.5%) and distributed on filter paper attached to the inner surface of the lid of the Petri dish, pure essential oil and distributed on the surface of the culture medium, and control) and five evaluation periods (2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 days of incubation). Was used 0.25μL mL-1 of citronella oil in all treatments. Of the treatments evaluated the use of pure oil distributed on the surface of the culture medium was more effective in reducing the mycelial diameter in all evaluations. In this method the rate of mycelial growth was 9,02 mm day-1, reaching in last evaluation 79,77 mm.
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Using a network representation for real soil samples and mathematical models for microbial spread, we show that the structural heterogeneity of the soil habitat may have a very significant influence on the size of microbial invasions of the soil pore space. In particular, neglecting the soil structural heterogeneity may lead to a substantial underestimation of microbial invasion. Such effects are explained in terms of a crucial interplay between heterogeneity in microbial spread and heterogeneity in the topology of soil networks. The main influence of network topology on invasion is linked to the existence of long channels in soil networks that may act as bridges for transmission of microorganisms between distant parts of soil.