Literature DB >> 21391824

Postharvest dark skin spots in potato tubers are an oversuberization response to Rhizoctonia solani infection.

Yossi Buskila1, Leah Tsror Lahkim, Michal Sharon, Paula Teper-Bamnolker, Orly Holczer-Erlich, Shimon Warshavsky, Idit Ginzberg, Saul Burdman, Dani Eshel.   

Abstract

Israeli farmers export 250,000 tons of potato tubers annually, ≈40,000 tons of which are harvested early, before skin set. In recent years, there has been an increase in the occurrence of dark skin spots on early-harvested potato tubers ('Nicola') packed in large bags containing peat to retain moisture. The irregular necrotic spots form during storage and overseas transport. Characterization of the conditions required for symptom development indicated that bag temperature after packing is 11 to 13°C and it reaches the target temperature (8°C) only 25 days postharvest. This slow decrease in temperature may promote the establishment of pathogen infection. Isolates from typical lesions were identified as Rhizoctonia spp., and Koch's postulates were completed with 25 isolates by artificial inoculation performed at 13 to 14°C. Phylogenetic analysis, using the internal transcribed spacer sequences (ITS1 and ITS2) of rDNA genes, assigned three isolates to anastomosis group 3 of Rhizoctonia solani. Inoculation of wounded tubers with mycelium of these R. solani isolates resulted in an oversuberization response in the infected area. With isolate Rh17 of R. solani, expression of the suberin biosynthesis-related genes StKCS6 and CYP86A33 increased 6.8- and 3.4-fold, respectively, 24 h postinoculation, followed by a 2.9-fold increase in POP_A, a gene associated with wound-induced suberization, expression 48 h postinoculation, compared with the noninoculated tubers. We suggest that postharvest dark spot disease is an oversuberization response to R. solani of AG-3 infection that occurs prior to tuber skin set.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21391824     DOI: 10.1094/PHYTO-09-10-0251

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phytopathology        ISSN: 0031-949X            Impact factor:   4.025


  4 in total

1.  Suberin-associated fatty alcohols in Arabidopsis: distributions in roots and contributions to seed coat barrier properties.

Authors:  Sollapura J Vishwanath; Dylan K Kosma; Ian P Pulsifer; Sabine Scandola; Stéphanie Pascal; Jérôme Joubès; Franziska Dittrich-Domergue; René Lessire; Owen Rowland; Frédéric Domergue
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2013-09-09       Impact factor: 8.340

2.  A Novel Signaling Pathway Required for Arabidopsis Endodermal Root Organization Shapes the Rhizosphere Microbiome.

Authors:  Julius Durr; Guilhem Reyt; Stijn Spaepen; Sally Hilton; Cathal Meehan; Wu Qi; Takehiro Kamiya; Paulina Flis; Hugh G Dickinson; Attila Feher; Umashankar Shivshankar; Shruti Pavagadhi; Sanjay Swarup; David Salt; Gary D Bending; Jose Gutierrez-Marcos
Journal:  Plant Cell Physiol       Date:  2021-05-11       Impact factor: 4.927

3.  Antioxidant genes of plants and fungal pathogens are distinctly regulated during disease development in different Rhizoctonia solani pathosystems.

Authors:  Jamil Samsatly; Tanya R Copley; Suha H Jabaji
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  A chemical window into the impact of RNAi silencing of the StNAC103 gene in potato tuber periderms: Soluble metabolites, suberized cell walls, and antibacterial defense.

Authors:  Keyvan Dastmalchi; Oseloka Chira; Mathiu Perez Rodriguez; Barney Yoo; Olga Serra; Mercè Figueras; Ruth E Stark
Journal:  Phytochemistry       Date:  2021-07-31       Impact factor: 4.004

  4 in total

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