First Report of Basal Rot of Onion Caused by Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cepae in Saudi Arabia
Autor: | Mahmoud H. El_Komy, Xuewen Gao, Ali Almasrahi, Yasser E. Ibrahim, Anwar H. Sharafaddin, Amgad A. Saleh, Younis K. Hamad |
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Rok vydání: | 2023 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Plant Disease. |
ISSN: | 1943-7692 0191-2917 |
Popis: | Onion (Allium cepa L.) is a globally important crop worldwide including Saudi Arabia. In November 2020, 2-month-old onion plants (cv. Redwing) in commercial fields within the Sajir area of Riyadh region (∼ 1.4 ha), showed symptoms of yellowing, wilting, stunting, bulb discoloration, rot in the basal parts of bulb and decrease in roots. In the advanced stages, the affected plants collapsed and died. The incidence of symptomatic plants ranged from 30 to 65% in the surveyed fields. To isolate the pathogen, symptomatic onion plants (n =20) were sampled. Diseased tissues from roots and bulbs were cut into small pieces (4 × 4 mm), sanitized with 1% sodium hypochlorite solution for 2 min, submerged in 70% alcohol for 20 s, then rinsed with sterile water, before plating on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium. The plates were incubated at 25°C for 6 days. Subcultures of the mycelia grown out of the diseased tissues produced purplish pink fungal colonies on PDA. On carnation leaf agar, cultures were characteristic of Fusarium oxysporum as described by Leslie and Summerell (2006), with the presence of unicellular microconidia (3.8 to 7.8 × 1.7 to 2.5 μm, n= 50) without septa in false heads or short monophialides and slightly curved macroconidia (16.3 to 28 × 4.2 to 6.1 μm, n= 50) with two to four septa. Older mycelia developed many chlamydospores that were single or in short chains. To further confirm the pathogen identification, DNA was extracted from single-spore cultures of three representative isolates using the DNeasy Plant Mini kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany). Three different fungal nuclear regions of internal transcribed spacer (ITS), elongation factor 1-α, (TEF1-α) and the second largest subunit of DNA-directed RNA polymerase II (RPB2) DNA were amplified by PCR and sequenced with the following primers: ITS4 and ITS5 (White et al. 1990); EF-1 and EF-2 (O’Donnell et al. 2008); and fRPB2-5F and fRPB2-7cR (Liu et al. 1999), respectively. Phylogenetic analysis based on the alignment of the ITS, TEF1-α, and RPB2 sequences using MEGA7 placed these isolates in the F. oxysporum clade. The ITS, TEF1-α, and RPB2 sequences of an isolate FOC-OR9 were submitted to GenBank (OL721757, OL764494, and OL764495 respectively). To confirm the forma specialis cepae, a fragment of the F. oxysporum f. sp. cepae gene Secreted In Xylem 3 (SIX3) was amplified by PCR (Kalman et al. 2020). The SIX3 amplicon (∼ 277-bp) was sent for sequencing, and the sequence was submitted to GenBank (OL828265). BLASTn analysis of the sequences showed 100% identity with F. oxysporum f. sp. cepae (KP746408). To fulfill Koch’s postulates, pathogenicity tests were performed with healthy onion bulbs cv. “Redwing” of 100–150 g each. Prior to inoculation of onion bulbs, the dry bulb scales, one of the fleshy inner scales, as well as the roots were removed. Bulbs were then surface sterilized (as described above) and injected with 20 µl of a conidial suspension (106 spores/ ml) into the basal plate of each bulb and approximately 1 cm deep into the tissue. Six bulbs were inoculated for each isolate, placed in a mesh bag, and incubated at 28 °C in the dark. Six bulbs injected with sterile water and six non-inoculated bulbs served as controls. At the 4th week post inoculation, necrotic rot symptoms and brown discoloration were observed on the basal plates of these inoculated bulbs (similar symptoms to those observed in the field), while control treatments showed no symptoms. The pathogen was re-isolated from the basal plates onto PDA and identified morphologically and molecularly as F. oxysporum f. sp. cepae, thus fulfilling Koch’s postulates. The test was repeated twice. This pathogen was previously reported causing onion basal rot in United Kingdom (Taylor, et al., 2013). To our knowledge, this is the first report of basal rot in onion caused by F. oxysporum f. sp. cepae in Saudi Arabia. It is recommended that preventive management should be considered as this disease may cause significant economic losses for onion growers in Saudi Arabia. Also, Fusarium mycotoxin contamination of onion bulb could pose a public health risk. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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