Literature DB >> 24373199

Wheat stripe (yellow) rust caused by Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici.

Wanquan Chen1, Colin Wellings, Xianming Chen, Zhengsheng Kang, Taiguo Liu.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Stripe (yellow) rust, caused by Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici (Pst), is a serious disease of wheat occurring in most wheat areas with cool and moist weather conditions during the growing season. The basidiomycete fungus is an obligate biotrophic parasite that is difficult to culture on artificial media. Pst is a macrocyclic, heteroecious fungus that requires both primary (wheat or grasses) and alternate (Berberis or Mahonia spp.) host plants to complete its life cycle. Urediniospores have the capacity for wind dispersal over long distances, which may, under high inoculum pressure, extend to thousands of kilometres from the initial infection sites. Stripe rust, which is considered to be the current major rust disease affecting winter cereal production across the world, has been studied intensively for over a century. This review summarizes the current knowledge of the Pst-wheat pathosystem, with emphasis on the life cycle, uredinial infection process, population biology of the pathogen, genes for stripe rust resistance in wheat and molecular perspectives of wheat-Pst interactions. TAXONOMY: The stripe rust pathogen, Puccinia striiformis Westend. (Ps), is classified in kingdom Fungi, phylum Basidiomycota, class Urediniomycetes, order Uredinales, family Pucciniaceae, genus Puccinia. Ps is separated below the species level by host specialization on various grass genera, comprising up to nine formae speciales, of which P. striiformis f. sp. tritici Erikss. (Pst) causes stripe (or yellow) rust on wheat. HOST RANGE: Uredinial/telial hosts: Pst mainly infects common wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), durum wheat (T. turgidum var. durum L.), cultivated emmer wheat (T. dicoccum Schrank), wild emmer wheat (T. dicoccoides Korn) and triticale (Triticosecale). Pst can infect certain cultivated barleys (Hordeum vulgare L.) and rye (Secale cereale L.), but generally does not cause severe epidemics. In addition, Pst may infect naturalized and improved pasture grass species, such as Elymus canadensis L., Leymus secalinus Hochst, Agropyron spp. Garetn, Hordeum spp. L., Phalaris spp. L and Bromus unioloides Kunth. Pycnial/aecial (alternative) hosts: Barberry (Berberis chinensis, B. koreana, B. holstii, B. vulgaris, B. shensiana, B. potaninii, B. dolichobotrys, B. heteropoda, etc.) and Oregon grape (Mahonia aquifolium). DISEASE SYMPTOMS: Stripe rust appears as a mass of yellow to orange urediniospores erupting from pustules arranged in long, narrow stripes on leaves (usually between veins), leaf sheaths, glumes and awns on susceptible plants. Resistant wheat cultivars are characterized by various infection types from no visual symptoms to small hypersensitive flecks to uredinia surrounded by chlorosis or necrosis with restricted urediniospore production. On seedlings, uredinia produced by the infection of a single urediniospore are not confined by leaf veins, but progressively emerge from the infection site in all directions, potentially covering the entire leaf surface. Individual uredinial pustules are oblong, 0.4-0.7 mm in length and 0.1 mm in width. Urediniospores are broadly ellipsoidal to broadly obovoid, (16-)18-30(-32) × (15-)17-27(-28) μm, with a mean of 24.5 × 21.6 μm, yellow to orange in colour, echinulate, and with 6-18 scattered germ pores. Urediniospores can germinate rapidly when free moisture (rain or dew) occurs on leaf surfaces and when the temperatures range is between 7 and 12 °C. At higher temperatures or during the later growing stages of the host, black telia are often produced, which are pulvinate to oblong, 0.2-0.7 mm in length and 0.1 mm in width. The teliospores are predominantly two-celled, dark brown with thick walls, mostly oblong-clavate, (24-)31-56(-65) × (11-)14-25(-29) μm in length and width, and rounded or flattened at the apex.
© 2013 BSPP AND JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD.

Entities:  

Keywords:  genes for resistance; infection procedure; life cycle; molecular aspect; population biology

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24373199      PMCID: PMC6638732          DOI: 10.1111/mpp.12116

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


  57 in total

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3.  Molecular mapping and marker development for the Triticum dicoccoides-derived stripe rust resistance gene YrSM139-1B in bread wheat cv. Shaanmai 139.

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4.  Defeating the Warrior: genetic architecture of triticale resistance against a novel aggressive yellow rust race.

Authors:  Dominik Losert; Hans Peter Maurer; Willmar L Leiser; Tobias Würschum
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Review 5.  A review of wheat diseases-a field perspective.

Authors:  Melania Figueroa; Kim E Hammond-Kosack; Peter S Solomon
Journal:  Mol Plant Pathol       Date:  2017-12-26       Impact factor: 5.663

6.  Mapping stripe rust resistance gene YrZH22 in Chinese wheat cultivar Zhoumai 22 by bulked segregant RNA-Seq (BSR-Seq) and comparative genomics analyses.

Authors:  Yong Wang; Jingzhong Xie; Huaizhi Zhang; Bingmin Guo; Shunzong Ning; Yongxing Chen; Ping Lu; Qiuhong Wu; Miaomiao Li; Deyun Zhang; Guanghao Guo; Yan Zhang; Dengcai Liu; Shaokui Zou; Jianwei Tang; Hong Zhao; Xicheng Wang; Jun Li; Wuyun Yang; Tingjie Cao; Guihong Yin; Zhiyong Liu
Journal:  Theor Appl Genet       Date:  2017-07-15       Impact factor: 5.699

7.  Convergence Analysis of Rust Fungi and Anther Smuts Reveals Their Common Molecular Adaptation to a Phytoparasitic Lifestyle.

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8.  A genome-wide association study of resistance to stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici) in a worldwide collection of hexaploid spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.).

Authors:  Marco Maccaferri; Junli Zhang; Peter Bulli; Zewdie Abate; Shiaoman Chao; Dario Cantu; Eligio Bossolini; Xianming Chen; Michael Pumphrey; Jorge Dubcovsky
Journal:  G3 (Bethesda)       Date:  2015-01-20       Impact factor: 3.154

9.  Small RNAs from the wheat stripe rust fungus (Puccinia striiformis f.sp. tritici).

Authors:  Nicholas A Mueth; Sowmya R Ramachandran; Scot H Hulbert
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10.  Genome-Wide Analysis of Simple Sequence Repeats and Efficient Development of Polymorphic SSR Markers Based on Whole Genome Re-Sequencing of Multiple Isolates of the Wheat Stripe Rust Fungus.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-06-12       Impact factor: 3.240

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