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  • Title: First Report of Postharvest Fruit Rot Caused by Neofusicoccum parvum on Prunus salicina (Nai Plum) in China.
    Author: Peng Z.
    Journal: Plant Dis; 2024 Mar 20; ():. PubMed ID: 38506910.
    Abstract:
    Nai plum (Prunus salicina var. cordata cv. Younai) is one of the most popular fruit crop in South China. In July 2023, a fruit rot of nai plum with about 5 % disease incidence was observed in a fruit market of Changsha city, Hunan Province, China. Initially, small, brown lesions appeared randomly on the fruit surface, with disease progression, the lesions gradually expanded and developed into soft rot. To isolate possible fungi from rotten fruits, small pieces (2 × 2 mm) from the periphery of 10 infected fruits were surface-sterilized using 70% ethanol for 10 s, rinsed three times in sterile distilled water, air dried, and then placed onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates and incubated at 28℃ for three days. Emerging colonies were subcultured by hyphal tip transfer on fresh PDA. A total of ten isolates with similar morphology were obtained. Fungal colonies were initially white, gradually turning gray and eventually becoming black, and aerial hyphae were dense and fluffy. Conidia were hyaline, single celled, ellipsoidal to fusiform, and range from 12.7 to 20.0 μm long (avg. 16.9 ± 2.39 μm) × 5.3 to 7.3 μm wide (avg. 6.3 ± 0.82 μm). These morphological characteristics of these isolates matched those of Neofusicoccum parvum (Phillips et al. 2013). To future confirmation of the identify, the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, translation elongation factor 1-alpha (TEF1-a), and beta-tubulin TUB2) genes of two representative isolates (JXNP1 and JXNP2) were amplified and sequenced using primer sets ITS5/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), EF1-728F/EF1-986R (Carbone and Kohn 1999; Phillips et al. 2013), and BT2A/BT2B (Glass and Donaldson 1995), respectively. The sequences of both isolates were deposited in GenBank for the ITS (accession nos. OR899331 and OR899332), TEF1-a gene (accession nos. OR909890 and OR909891) and TUB2 gene (accession nos. OR909892 and OR909893). BLAST analysis showed 99-100% identity with the ex-type strain of N. parvum (CMW9081) for ITS, TEF1-a and TUB2. A maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree was constructed using IQtree web server based on combined ITS, TEF1-a and TUB2 data set. The phylogenetic tree revealed that two isolates clustered with N. parvum in a clade with 90% bootstrap support. Based on morphological and molecular data analysis, the isolates were identified as N. parvum. To confirm the pathogenicity, five healthy nai plum fruits were wounded by using a sterile needle after surface sterilization with 75% ethanol, then a 5-mm-diameter mycelial disc of isolate JXNP1 was taped to the wound, the control fruits were taped with sterile agar plugs. All fruits were incubated at 25 ℃ with 80% humidity. After five days, typical naturally occurring fruit rot symptoms appeared on the fruits which inoculated with N. parvum, whereas control fruits remained asymptomatic. To fulfill Koch's postulates, the pathogen was re-isolated from the inoculated fruits and comfirmed as N. parvum by morphological and molecular analysis. Previous studies reported that N. parvum caused fruit rot on various common fruits in China, including loquat, kiwifruit and citrus (Lei et al. 2013; Zhai et al. 2019; Zhou et al. 2013). To our knowledge, this is the first report of N. parvum causing postharvest fruit rot on nai plum in China. This finding provides critical insights for the management of the high-risk disease on plum in China.
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