Literature DB >> 32121208

Evidence of Microdochium Fungi Associated with Cereal Grains in Russia.

Tatiana Yu Gagkaeva1, Aleksandra S Orina1, Olga P Gavrilova1, Nadezhda N Gogina2.   

Abstract

In total, 46 Microdochium strains from five different geographic regions of Russia were explored with respect to genetic diversity, morphology, and secondary metabolites. Based on the results of PCR, 59% and 28% of the strains were identified as M. nivale and M. majus, respectively. As a result of sequencing four genome regions, namely ITS, LSU, BTUB, and RPB2 (2778 bp), five genetically and phenotypically similar strains from Western Siberia were identified as M. seminicola, which, according to our findings, is the prevalent Microdochium species in this territory. This is the first record of M. seminicola in Russia. Attempts were made to distinguish between Microdochium species and to identify species-specific morphological characteristics in the anamorph and teleomorph stages and physiological properties. We examined the occurrence frequency of conidia with different numbers of septa in the strains of Microdochium. The predominance of three-septate macroconidia in M. majus was higher than that in M. nivale and typically exceeded 60% occurrence. Most M. majus and M. nivale strains formed walled protoperithecia on wheat stems. Only three strains of M. majus and one strain each of M. nivale and M. seminicola produced mature perithecia. The growth rate of M. seminicola strains was significantly lower on agar media at 5-25 °C than those of M. majus and M. nivale strains. Multimycotoxin analysis by HPLC-MS/MS revealed that the strains of three Microdochium species did not produce any toxic metabolites.

Entities:  

Keywords:  DNA; M. majus; M. seminicola; Microdochium nivale; morphology; mycotoxins; seed-borne fungi

Year:  2020        PMID: 32121208     DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms8030340

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microorganisms        ISSN: 2076-2607


  6 in total

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Review 2.  Snow mold of winter cereals: a complex disease and a challenge for resistance breeding.

Authors:  Mira L Ponomareva; Vladimir Yu Gorshkov; Sergey N Ponomarev; Viktor Korzun; Thomas Miedaner
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3.  Rye Snow Mold-Associated Microdochium nivale Strains Inhabiting a Common Area: Variability in Genetics, Morphotype, Extracellular Enzymatic Activities, and Virulence.

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Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2020-12-03

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5.  Phosphorus and Zinc Are Strongly Associated with Belowground Fungal Communities in Wheat Field under Long-Term Fertilization.

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6.  Resistance to Snow Mold as a Target Trait for Rye Breeding.

Authors:  Mira Ponomareva; Vladimir Gorshkov; Sergey Ponomarev; Gulnaz Mannapova; Danil Askhadullin; Damir Askhadullin; Olga Gogoleva; Azat Meshcherov; Viktor Korzun
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-09-26
  6 in total

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