Literature DB >> 23279114

Fusarium culmorum: causal agent of foot and root rot and head blight on wheat.

Barbara Scherm1, Virgilio Balmas, Francesca Spanu, Giovanna Pani, Giovanna Delogu, Matias Pasquali, Quirico Migheli.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Fusarium culmorum is a ubiquitous soil-borne fungus able to cause foot and root rot and Fusarium head blight on different small-grain cereals, in particular wheat and barley. It causes significant yield and quality losses and results in contamination of the grain with mycotoxins. This review summarizes recent research activities related to F. culmorum, including studies into its population diversity, mycotoxin biosynthesis, mechanisms of pathogenesis and resistance, the development of diagnostic tools and preliminary genome sequence surveys. We also propose potential research areas that may expand our basic understanding of the wheat-F. culmorum interaction and assist in the management of the disease caused by this pathogen. TAXONOMY: Fusarium culmorum (W.G. Smith) Sacc. Kingdom Fungi; Phylum Ascomycota; Subphylum Pezizomycotina; Class Sordariomycetes; Subclass Hypocreomycetidae; Order Hypocreales; Family Nectriaceae; Genus Fusarium. DISEASE SYMPTOMS: Foot and root rot (also known as Fusarium crown rot): seedling blight with death of the plant before or after emergence; brown discoloration on roots and coleoptiles of the infected seedlings; brown discoloration on subcrown internodes and on the first two/three internodes of the main stem; tiller abortion; formation of whiteheads with shrivelled white grains; Fusarium head blight: prematurely bleached spikelets or blighting of the entire head, which remains empty or contains shrunken dark kernels. IDENTIFICATION AND DETECTION: Morphological identification is based on the shape of the macroconidia formed on sporodochia on carnation leaf agar. The conidiophores are branched monophialides, short and wide. The macroconidia are relatively short and stout with an apical cell blunt or slightly papillate; the basal cell is foot-shaped or just notched. Macroconidia are thick-walled and curved, usually 3-5 septate, and mostly measuring 30-50 × 5.0-7.5 μm. Microconidia are absent. Oval to globose chlamydospores are formed, intercalary in the hyphae, solitary, in chains or in clumps; they are also formed from macroconidia. The colony grows very rapidly (1.6-2.2 cm/day) on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at the optimum temperature of 25 °C. The mycelium on PDA is floccose, whitish, light yellow or red. The pigment on the reverse plate on PDA varies from greyish-rose, carmine red or burgundy. A wide array of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and real-time PCR tools, as well as complementary methods, which are summarised in the first two tables, have been developed for the detection and/or quantification of F. culmorum in culture and in naturally infected plant tissue. HOST RANGE: Fusarium culmorum has a wide range of host plants, mainly cereals, such as wheat, barley, oats, rye, corn, sorghum and various grasses. In addition, it has been isolated from sugar beet, flax, carnation, bean, pea, asparagus, red clover, hop, leeks, Norway spruce, strawberry and potato tuber. Fusarium culmorum has also been associated with dermatitis on marram grass planters in the Netherlands, although its role as a causal agent of skin lesions appears questionable. It is also isolated as a symbiont able to confer resistance to abiotic stress, and has been proposed as a potential biocontrol agent to control the aquatic weed Hydrilla spp. USEFUL WEBSITES: http://isolate.fusariumdb.org/; http://sppadbase.ipp.cnr.it/; http://www.broad.mit.edu/annotation/genome/fusarium_group/MultiHome.html; http://www.fgsc.net/Fusarium/fushome.htm; http://plantpath.psu.edu/facilities/fusarium-research-center; http://www.phi-base.org/; http://www.uniprot.org/; http://www.cabi.org/; http://www.indexfungorum.org/
© 2012 BSPP AND BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23279114      PMCID: PMC6638779          DOI: 10.1111/mpp.12011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Plant Pathol        ISSN: 1364-3703            Impact factor:   5.663


  58 in total

1.  Airborne and Grain Dust Fungal Community Compositions Are Shaped Regionally by Plant Genotypes and Farming Practices.

Authors:  Loïc Pellissier; Anne Oppliger; Alexandre H Hirzel; Dessislava Savova-Bianchi; Guilain Mbayo; Fabio Mascher; Stefan Kellenberger; Hélène Niculita-Hirzel
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2016-01-29       Impact factor: 4.792

2.  Genome-wide fungal stress responsive miRNA expression in wheat.

Authors:  Behçet Inal; Mine Türktaş; Hakan Eren; Emre Ilhan; Sezer Okay; Mehmet Atak; Mustafa Erayman; Turgay Unver
Journal:  Planta       Date:  2014-08-26       Impact factor: 4.116

3.  Calling from distance: attraction of soil bacteria by plant root volatiles.

Authors:  Kristin Schulz-Bohm; Saskia Gerards; Maria Hundscheid; Jasper Melenhorst; Wietse de Boer; Paolina Garbeva
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2018-01-22       Impact factor: 10.302

4.  Pest categorisation of Fusarium pseudograminearum.

Authors:  Claude Bragard; Paula Baptista; Elisavet Chatzivassiliou; Francesco Di Serio; Paolo Gonthier; Josep Anton Jaques Miret; Annemarie Fejer Justesen; Alan MacLeod; Christer Sven Magnusson; Panagiotis Milonas; Juan A Navas-Cortes; Stephen Parnell; Roel Potting; Emilio Stefani; Hans-Hermann Thulke; Wopke Van der Werf; Antonio Vicent Civera; Jonathan Yuen; Lucia Zappalà; Quirico Migheli; Irene Vloutoglou; Ewelina Czwienczek; Andrea Maiorano; Franz Streissl; Philippe Lucien Reignault
Journal:  EFSA J       Date:  2022-06-29

5.  Core Rhizosphere Microbiomes of Dryland Wheat Are Influenced by Location and Land Use History.

Authors:  Daniel C Schlatter; Chuntao Yin; Scot Hulbert; Timothy C Paulitz
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2020-02-18       Impact factor: 4.792

6.  Cytogenetic mapping of a major locus for resistance to Fusarium head blight and crown rot of wheat on Thinopyrum elongatum 7EL and its pyramiding with valuable genes from a Th. ponticum homoeologous arm onto bread wheat 7DL.

Authors:  Carla Ceoloni; Paola Forte; Ljiljana Kuzmanović; Silvio Tundo; Ilaria Moscetti; Pasquale De Vita; Maria Elena Virili; Renato D'Ovidio
Journal:  Theor Appl Genet       Date:  2017-06-27       Impact factor: 5.699

7.  Correlation between lipophilicity of newly synthesized ionic liquids and selected Fusarium genus growth rate.

Authors:  Milan Vraneš; Aleksandar Tot; Jasenka Ćosić; Snežana Papović; Jovana Panić; Slobodan Gadžurić; Nenad Janković; Karolina Vrandečić
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2019-06-18       Impact factor: 4.036

8.  Analysis of expressed sequence tags from cDNA library of Fusarium culmorum infected barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) roots.

Authors:  Feyza Tufan; Cüneyt Uçarlı; Filiz Gürel
Journal:  Bioinformation       Date:  2015-01-30

9.  Seed inoculation with endophytic fungal entomopathogens promotes plant growth and reduces crown and root rot (CRR) caused by Fusarium culmorum in wheat.

Authors:  Lara R Jaber
Journal:  Planta       Date:  2018-08-23       Impact factor: 4.116

10.  FcStuA from Fusarium culmorum controls wheat foot and root rot in a toxin dispensable manner.

Authors:  Matias Pasquali; Francesca Spanu; Barbara Scherm; Virgilio Balmas; Lucien Hoffmann; Kim E Hammond-Kosack; Marco Beyer; Quirico Migheli
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-02-22       Impact factor: 3.240

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