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A New Biotype of Phaeosphaeria sp.
of Uncertain Affinity Causing Stagonospora Leaf Blotch Disease in Cereals in
Poland. E. Reszka, E. Arseniuk, and A.
Malkus, Department of Plant Pathology, Plant Breeding and Acclimatization
Institute, Radzików, Poland; K. R. Chung, Citrus Research and Education Center,
University of Florida, Lake Alfred; and N. R. O’Neill, Q. J. Song, and P. P.
Ueng, USDA-ARS, Beltsville, MD 20705. Plant Dis. 90:113, 2006; published on-line
as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0113B. Accepted for publication 25 October 2005.
A new Phaeosphaeria sp. biotype was
isolated from winter ryes in Poland during 1995. Two isolates, Sn23-1 and
Sn48-1, were obtained from diseased leaves of cvs. Motto and Dańkowskie,
respectively. The rye Phaeosphaeria sp. represented by isolate Sn48-1 has
similar pycnidiospore morphology and induces disease symptoms in cereals
similar to Phaeosphaeria nodorum, the causal agent of Stagonospora
nodorum blotch disease (4). The pathogen (Sn48-1) produces hyaline, cylindrical
pycnidiospores that are mostly three-septate and measure 12.8 to 23.7 × 2.1 to
3.2 µm (average size = 16 × 2.6 µm) on water agar. A molecular comparison of
several genes in isolates Sn23-1 and Sn48-1 revealed that the rye
Phaeosphaeria sp. was different from P. nodorum. In the conserved
alpha-box sequence (1,93 bp) of the MAT1-1 gene, a four nucleotide
difference occurred between the wheat-biotype P. nodorum and isolates
Sn23-1 and Sn48-1 (GenBank Accession Nos. AY072933 and AF322008). In addition,
the length of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the nuclear rDNA
was the same for the wheat-biotype P. nodorum and the two rye
Phaeosphaeria sp. isolates. However, a six nucleotide discrepancy was found
in the ITS region (GenBank Accession Nos. U77362 and AF321323). The
beta-glucosidase (bgl1) and beta-tubulin (tubA) genes differ in
length between the wheat-biotype P. nodorum and two rye Phaeosphaeria
sp. isolates (2,3). The main difference was due to the intron sizes of these two
genes. One extra nucleotide was found in the intron2 of the bgl1 gene
(GenBank Accession Nos. AY683619 and AY683620) and the intron1 of the tubA
gene (GenBank Accession Nos. AY786337 and AY786331), respectively, in these two
rye Phaeosphaeria sp. isolates. Disease severity on the fifth leaf (GS15)
of Polish wheat (Alba, Begra, and Liwilla), triticale (Bogo and Pinokio), and
rye (Zduno) cultivars was assessed with one (resistant) to nine (susceptible)
scales 14 days after inoculation. Aggressiveness of wheat-biotype P. nodorum
isolate Sn26-1 and rye Phaeosphaeria sp. isolate Sn48-1 was significant (P
< 0.01) in five cultivars except in the moderately resistant wheat cv. Liwilla.
The rye Phaeosphaeria sp. isolate Sn48-1 severely affected Polish rye
Zduno (8.3) and two triticale cultivars (6.5), while the infection by isolate
Sn26-1 was moderate (3-4). On the contrary, the wheat-biotype P. nodorum
isolate Sn26-1 was more aggressive on wheat (4.1 on moderately resistant Alba
and 6.2 on highly susceptible Begra) than the rye Phaeosphaeria sp.
isolate Sn48-1, which had a scale of 2.2 and 4.3, respectively. Under laboratory
conditions, the rye isolate Sn48-1 was able to cross with the wheat-biotype
P. nodorum isolate Sn26-1 that has an opposite mating-type (MAT1-2)
gene, but few viable ascospores were produced (1).
References: (1) P. C. Czembor and E. Arseniuk. Mycol. Res. 104:919, 2000.
(2) A. Malkus et al. FEMS (Fed. Eur. Microbiol. Soc.) Lett. 249:49, 2005. (3) E.
Reszka et al. Can. J. Bot. 83:1001, 2005. (4) M. J. Richardson and M. Noble.
Plant Pathol. 19:159, 1970.
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