| Literature DB >> 27433119 |
Yan Wang1, Amy O Charkowski2, Cuiyun Zeng1, Tiantian Zhu1, Huizhen Wang1, Honggang Chen1.
Abstract
A new leaf spot disease was observed on leaves of Rheum palmatum (Chinese rhubarb) in Northwest China (Gansu Province) starting in 2005. A Septoria-like fungus was isolated and completion of Koch's postulates confirmed that the fungus was the casual agent of the leaf spot disease. Morphology and molecular methods were combined to identify the pathogen. The fungus produced conidiomata pycnidia and the conidia were 2~5 septate, 61.2~134.1 µm in length and 3.53~5.3 µm in width, which is much larger than the known Spetoria species that infects Polygonaceae species. Phylogenic analysis of the internal transcribed spacer region confirmed that this Spetoria-like fungus is within the Spetoria genus but distinct from known Spetoria species. Together, these morphological and phylogenetic data support that the R. palmatum infecting Spetoria strain is a newly-described plant pathogenic species.Entities:
Keywords: Internal transcribed spacer rDNA; Novel pathogen; Rheum palmatum; Taxonomy
Year: 2016 PMID: 27433119 PMCID: PMC4945543 DOI: 10.5941/MYCO.2016.44.2.93
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycobiology ISSN: 1229-8093 Impact factor: 1.858
Fig. 1A, B, Symptoms of leaf spot on Rheum palmatum caused by Septoria.
Fig. 2Septoria palmatum. A~C, Colony on potato dextrose agar, oatmeal agar, and malt extract agar; D, Pycnidia; E, F, Conidia (scale bars: D = 100 µm, E = 20 µm, F = 25 µm).
Fig. 3Bootstrap consensus tree constructed using the neighbor-joining method from 489 bp of ribosomal internal transcribed spacer DNA obtained from the TCM-6 and Septoria population. The tree was rooted to Dividiella tassiana. The isolate TCM-6 are indicated in bold font.