Literature DB >> 30678560

The Lolium Pathotype of Magnaporthe oryzae Recovered from a Single Blasted Wheat Plant in the United States.

Mark Farman1, Gary Peterson2, Li Chen3, John Starnes3, Barbara Valent4, Paul Bachi5, Lloyd Murdock6, Don Hershman7, Kerry Pedley8, J Mauricio Fernandes9, Jorge Bavaresco9.   

Abstract

Wheat blast is a devastating disease that was first identified in Brazil and has subsequently spread to surrounding countries in South America. In May 2011, disease scouting in a University of Kentucky wheat trial plot in Princeton, KY identified a single plant with disease symptoms that differed from the Fusarium head blight that was present in surrounding wheat. The plant in question bore a single diseased head that was bleached yellow from a point about one-third up the rachis to the tip. A gray mycelial mass was observed at the boundary of the healthy tissue and microscopic examination of this material revealed pyriform spores consistent with a Magnaporthe sp. The pathogen was subsequently identified as Magnaporthe oryzae through amplification and sequencing of molecular markers, and genome sequencing revealed that the U.S. wheat blast isolate was most closely related to an M. oryzae strain isolated from annual ryegrass in 2002 and quite distantly related to M. oryzae strains causing wheat blast in South America. The suspect isolate was pathogenic to wheat, as indicated by growth chamber inoculation tests. We conclude that this first occurrence of wheat blast in the United States was most likely caused by a strain that evolved from an endemic Lolium-infecting pathogen and not by an exotic introduction from South America. Moreover, we show that M. oryzae strains capable of infecting wheat have existed in the United States for at least 16 years. Finally, evidence is presented that the environmental conditions in Princeton during the spring of 2011 were unusually conducive to the early production of blast inoculum.

Entities:  

Year:  2017        PMID: 30678560     DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-05-16-0700-RE

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Dis        ISSN: 0191-2917            Impact factor:   4.438


  11 in total

1.  Rmg8 and Rmg7, wheat genes for resistance to the wheat blast fungus, recognize the same avirulence gene AVR-Rmg8.

Authors:  Vu Lan Anh; Yoshihiro Inoue; Soichiro Asuke; Trinh Thi Phuong Vy; Nguyen Tuan Anh; Shizhen Wang; Izumi Chuma; Yukio Tosa
Journal:  Mol Plant Pathol       Date:  2017-12-10       Impact factor: 5.663

Review 2.  Wheat spike blast: genetic interventions for effective management.

Authors:  Hanif Khan; Shabir Hussain Wani; Subhash Chander Bhardwaj; Kirti Rani; Santosh Kumar Bishnoi; Gyanendra Pratap Singh
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2022-04-27       Impact factor: 2.742

3.  Hydrogen peroxide detoxifying enzymes show different activity patterns in host and non-host plant interactions with Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum pathotype.

Authors:  Dipali Rani Gupta; Sanjida Khanom; Md Motiar Rohman; Mirza Hasanuzzaman; Musrat Zahan Surovy; Nur Uddin Mahmud; Md Robyul Islam; Ashifur Rahman Shawon; Mahfuzur Rahman; Kamel A Abd-Elsalam; Tofazzal Islam
Journal:  Physiol Mol Biol Plants       Date:  2021-09-06

4.  Effector gene reshuffling involves dispensable mini-chromosomes in the wheat blast fungus.

Authors:  Zhao Peng; Ely Oliveira-Garcia; Guifang Lin; Ying Hu; Melinda Dalby; Pierre Migeon; Haibao Tang; Mark Farman; David Cook; Frank F White; Barbara Valent; Sanzhen Liu
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2019-09-12       Impact factor: 5.917

5.  Pyricularia graminis-tritici is not the correct species name for the wheat blast fungus: response to Ceresini et al. (MPP 20:2).

Authors:  Barbara Valent; Mark Farman; Yukio Tosa; Dominik Begerow; Elisabeth Fournier; Pierre Gladieux; M Tofazzal Islam; Sophien Kamoun; Martin Kemler; Linda M Kohn; Marc-Henri Lebrun; Jason E Stajich; Nicholas J Talbot; Ryohei Terauchi; Didier Tharreau; Ning Zhang
Journal:  Mol Plant Pathol       Date:  2019-02       Impact factor: 5.663

6.  Retrospective Study on the Seasonal Forecast-Based Disease Intervention of the Wheat Blast Outbreaks in Bangladesh.

Authors:  Kwang-Hyung Kim; Eu Ddeum Choi
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2020-11-23       Impact factor: 5.753

7.  Mineral nutrient content of infected plants and allied soils provide insight into wheat blast epidemics.

Authors:  Md Saljar Rahman Chowdhury; Md Arifur Rahman; Kamrun Nahar; Khondoker M G Dastogeer; Islam Hamim; K M Mohiuddin
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2022-02-19

8.  Maintenance of divergent lineages of the Rice Blast Fungus Pyricularia oryzae through niche separation, loss of sex and post-mating genetic incompatibilities.

Authors:  Maud Thierry; Florian Charriat; Joëlle Milazzo; Henri Adreit; Sébastien Ravel; Sandrine Cros-Arteil; Sonia Borron; Violaine Sella; Thomas Kroj; Renaud Ioos; Elisabeth Fournier; Didier Tharreau; Pierre Gladieux
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2022-07-25       Impact factor: 7.464

9.  A PCR, qPCR, and LAMP Toolkit for the Detection of the Wheat Blast Pathogen in Seeds.

Authors:  Maud Thierry; Axel Chatet; Elisabeth Fournier; Didier Tharreau; Renaud Ioos
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2020-02-21

10.  Comparative Genomics and Gene Pool Analysis Reveal the Decrease of Genome Diversity and Gene Number in Rice Blast Fungi by Stable Adaption with Rice.

Authors:  Qi Wu; Yi Wang; Li-Na Liu; Kai Shi; Cheng-Yun Li
Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-22
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