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1.
Plant Dis ; 2023 Oct 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37807088

RESUMO

Melon (Cucumis melo L.) is the second most exported fruit in Brazil with an annual production of 27.5 million tons (FAO 2023). From September 2019 through February 2020, 50-day-old melon plants started showing root rot symptoms (dark-brow necrotic zones in their roots that extended to the collar zone) in northeastern Brazil, 30% of the plants in the fields were affected by the disease. The fields are in clay soil where melon, in monoculture, is produced all year long with three cycles of the culture per year. A total of 132 samples from "Yellow" and "Cantaloupe" cultivars were collected from four melon fields (4°59'45.3"S, 37°33'39.7"W; 4°57'10.2"S, 37°31'37.1"W; 5°38'17.9"S, 37°56'27.7"W; and 5°00'25.5"S, 37°23'55.3"W). Small pieces of diseased tissues were surface disinfested in 70% ethanol for 30 sec, in 2% sodium hypochlorite for 1 min, washed in sterilized distilled water, plated on a PDA Petri dishes with tetracycline (0.05g/L), and incubated for seven days at 28 ± 2 ºC. Nine representative isolates were selected for downstream analysis. Colonies were white and later became dark gray, pycnidia and conidia were produced after 30 days ofncubation at 25°C under near-UV light in water-agar medium. Conidia were hyaline when immature and dark brown when mature, ranging from cylindrical subovoid to ellipsoidal and septate to non-septate, and with an average size of 12.54 to 21.97 µm. The colonies were morphologically identified as Lasiodiplodia sp. (Phillips et al. 2013). Total DNA from the isolates was extracted and the ITS, TUB, and TEF-1α genes (Jayawardena et al. 2019) were partially amplified by PCR, Sanger sequenced, and deposited in Genbank: ITS (OM102511 to OM102520), TUB (OR062087 to OR062094 and OR062095), and TEF-1α (OP536826 to OP536835). Blastn analysis of the partial sequences ITS (519bp), TUB (388bp), and TEF-1α (315bp) showed 100% nucleotide similarity of the isolates with sequences of L. brasiliensis and L. theobromae from the GenBank. A phylogenetic tree was constructed using the Maximum Parsimony Analysis method. All nine isolates were grouped into the L. brasiliensis clade with 71% bootstrap support, confirming the isolates's identity. Pathogenicity assays were conducted in a greenhouse using the wooden toothpick inoculation method (Nogueira et al. 2019). "Goldex" Yellow melon seedlings were used in a completely randomized experimental design, with 10 treatments (9 isolates + Mock) and six replicates, with one plant per pot. Plants were inoculated 15 days after sowing, and disease severity was evaluated 50 days after inoculation. All nine isolates caused symptoms in the assessed melon plants. The fungus was reisolated from the lesions and looked morphologically identical to the inoculated fungus, fulfilling Koch's postulates. The pathogenicity test was repeated and yielded similar results. All samples in this study were provided by melon growers who were concerned about the high incidence of root rot disease in their plantations. More research needs to be conducted to determine the epidemiology and the extension of the economic impact caused by this pathogen to melons to develop strategies for disease control to properly assist the growers's concerns. This pathogen has been reported to cause disease in other crops in Brazil, e.g., watermelon (Alves et al. 2023) and apples (Martins et al. 2018). However, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of L. brasiliensis causing root rot in melons in Brazil.

2.
Plant Dis ; 2023 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36723959

RESUMO

Cucurbitaceae crops are widely cultivated in the Northeast region of Brazil, which is the biggest producer of melon and watermelon in the country (Oliveira, 2020). Between November and December 2020 leaves of pumpkins (Cucurbita maxima L.) and watermelon (Citrullus lanatus L.), and leaves and fruits of melon plants (Cucumis melo L.) were collected with moderate to severe necrotic, irregular, and brown lesions from farms in the state of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil. Fragments of diseased tissues were cut into small pieces and surface disinfested in 70% ethanol for 30 seconds, then in 2% sodium hypochlorite for 1 minute, and washed in sterile distilled water. Disinfested pieces of tissue were plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and incubated for seven days in the dark at 28 ± 2 °C. A total of 12 fungal isolates (four from pumpkins, one from watermelon, and seven from melons) were isolated from leaves and symptomatic fruits. All isolates in this study shared similar morphological characteristics. The colonies were dark gray to olive green in color with a velvety texture and surrounded by gray-white hyphae. The conidiophores were erect, tall, dark, and irregularly branched at the apex containing dark conidia, with 0 to 3 septa, variable in shape and size, forming chains that were often branched, globose, or subglobose with 3 to 4.5 µm in diameter. DNA from each isolate was extracted using the SDS method (Smith et al., 2001) and submitted to PCR amplification of the ITS and TEF1α regions with the primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990) and EF1-728F/EF1-986R (Carbone and Kohn 1999), respectively. The amplicons were sequenced and deposited in GenBank: ITS (OP493545-OP493556) and TEF1α (OP536836-OP536847). Blastn analysis of the ITS and TEF1α partial sequences revealed that all 12 isolates belong to the species Cladosporium tenuissimum, with 100% nucleotide similarity with sequences of many C. tenuissimum isolates deposited in GenBank. A phylogenetic tree was constructed using the Maximum Parsimony Analysis, with the concatenated sequences (ITS-TEF1α) on MEGAX software (version 11.0.8) (Tamura et al, 2018). All 12 isolates clustered in the same clade and were closely related to isolates A2PP5, A3I1, and XCHK2 with the respective accession numbers KU605789.1, KU605790.1, and MG873071.1 from GenBank, with 99% bootstrap support. The pathogenicity of the 12 isolates was evaluated in pumpkin and melon plants in a greenhouse. Spore suspensions (10 6 conidia/ml -1) were sprayed on the leaves of healthy seedlings until runoff, only water was sprayed on control plants as the mock, and five seedlings of each crop (melon and pumpkin) were inoculated in each treatment. All plants were covered with plastic bags for two days. Spots, similar to those observed on diseased plants in the field, developed on the inoculated leaves (after seven days from the inoculation day, no symptoms were observed on plants from the mock treatment) and the fungal morphology was identical to that observed on the originally diseased leaves, fulfilling Koch's postulate. The pathogenicity test was repeated and yielded the same results. The fact that all 12 isolates were pathogenic on pumpkin and melon leaves, indicates that many Cucurbits are susceptible to C. tenuissimum infection. Many growers in the region are reporting similar symptoms in their melon plantations and it appears that the disease incidence is getting more severe year after year, based on growers's reports. Therefore, more research needs to be conducted to determine the epidemiology and the extension of the economic impact caused by this pathogen to Cucurbits to develop strategies for disease control. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of C. tenuissimum causing disease in Cucurbits in Brazil.

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