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  • Title: First report of Rhizoctonia solani AG-4 HGI Causing Stem Canker on Fagopyrum tataricum (Tartary buckwheat) in China.
    Author: Li S, Zhang K, Khurshid M, Fan Y, Xu B, Zhou M.
    Journal: Plant Dis; 2020 Aug 27; ():. PubMed ID: 32854604.
    Abstract:
    Tartary buckwheat (Fagopyrum tataricum) is an ideal functional food source, which is well known to be gluten-free and rich in proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals, and flavonoids of various pharmaceutical uses, such as rutin, quercitin and epicatechin (Zhou, M et al. 2018). The Rhizoctonia solani AG-4 HGIII causing severe canker disease was first isolated from common buckwheat (F. esculentum) in Inner Mongolia of China (Zhou, H et al. 2015). In 2018, sunken lesion and dark brown symptoms were observed on the root and stem of ten days old Tartary buckwheat in Liangshan (28°21'N, 103°19''E), Sichuan Province and Fenghuang (28°19' N, 109°48' E), Hunan Province in China. In the beginning, water soaked spots appeared on the stem base, where gradually became rotten and necrotic, finally resulting in the damping-off and death of buckwheat seedlings. This disease had over 40% incidence and lead to serious losses to the buckwheat production in 2018. To isolate the pathogens on Tartary buckwheat, ten plants with typical symptoms were collected from each location. The infected tissue was taken and cut into 3mm pieces from the margin between healthy and diseased tissue, surface sterilized with 1% sodium hypochlorite solution for 4 min, washed three times with sterile distilled water, dried on sterilized filter paper and then placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) with 100 mg/ml streptomycin sulfate. After incubation at 28℃ in the dark for 2 days, mycelial tips of four fungal cultures were transferred to PDA plates for purification. Initially, colonies were pale white, and then turned brown after 2 days incubation. The mycelium was hairy and concentrically whorled in the culture medium. Microscopic observation showed that the hyphae characteristically branched at right angles and had constriction at the base of hyphal branches. Nuclear staining showed that the hyphae cells were multinuclear. These morphological features revealed that the isolates belonged to R. solani (Sneh et al. 1991). Subsequently, the ribosomal DNA (rDNA) internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of one isolate was amplified by PCR (White et al. 1990) and sequenced (GeneBank accession no. MT078642) by Shanghai Majorbio Bio-pharm Technology Co.,Ltd. DNA was extracted by Fungal genomic DNA Extraction Kit, D3390-02, OMEGA. The BLAST similarity analysis showed a 99.96% match with R. solani AG-4 HGI (GenBank accession no. JQ343830) and 99.85% identity to R. solani AG-4 HGI isolate SX-8 (GenBank accession no. KJ170346) (Suli, Sun et al. 2015). Furthermore, the phylogenetic analysis performed by the neighbour-joining method (MEGA 7 software) showed that the isolate was clearly clustered with the group of R. solani AG-4 HGI (Ireland et al. 2015). Pathogenicity was tested in the greenhouse condition to satisfy Koch's postulates. Tartary buckwheat plants of seven days old and fifty days old were respectively inoculated near the base of the stem neck with one mycelial plug contacted directly. Ten plants in a pot were inoculated as one treatment, four pots were used for replicates. Control plants were inoculated with PDA medium plugs without fungi. All the plants were kept at 26℃ with 14 h light, 10 h dark and 96% humidity. After five days (Suli, Sun et al. 2015), over 90% of the inoculated plants exhibited necrotic brown lesions on stems that was similar to those symptoms observed in the field, whereas control plants remained asymptomatic. The visible characteristics and ITS sequence of the pathogen re-isolated from symptomatic plants were in accordance with the original isolate (R. solani AG-4 HGI). Based on disease symptoms in the fields, morphological characteristics, ITS sequence analysis, and pathogenicity assay, we concluded that R. solani AG-4 HGI was the principle cause of Tartary buckwheat blight in Liangshan, Sichuan Province and Fenghuang, Hunan Province in China. Previously, R. solani AG-4 HGI has been identified as a Chinese chive pathogen (Shi, Y et al. 2017). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of the natural occurrence of Rhizoctonia solani AG-4 HGI affecting Tartary Buckwheat in China. This finding is helpful for the early diagnosis and identification of the disease, which will be the guiding of effective control methods to the devastating disease at the early stage.
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