Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1155321
Título: Pyricularia are mostly host-specialized with limited reciprocal cross-infection between wheat and endemic grasses in Minas Gerais, Brazil.
Autoria: ASCARI, J. P.
CAZÓN, L. I.
RAHNAMA, M.
LAMOUR, K.
FERNANDES, J. M. C.
FARMAN, M.
DEL PONTE, E.
Afiliação: JOÃO PAULO ASCARI, Universidade Federal de Viçosa; LUIS IGNACIO CAZÓN, Universidade Federal de Viçosa; MOSTAFA RAHNAMA, Tennessee Tech University; KURT LAMOUR, University of Tennessee; JOSE MAURICIO CUNHA FERNANDES, CNPT; MARK FARMAN, University of Kentucky; EMERSON DEL PONTE, Universidade Federal de Viçosa.
Ano de publicação: 2023
Referência: Phytopathology, 3 jul. 2023. Online ahead of print.
Conteúdo: Abstract: Wheat blast, caused by Pyricularia oryzae Triticum (PoT), is an emerging threat to global wheat production. Current understanding of the population biology of the pathogen and epidemiology of the disease has been based on phylogenomic studies that compared the wheat blast pathogen with isolates collected from grasses that were invasive to Brazilian wheat fields. In this study, we performed a comprehensive sampling of blast lesions in wheat crops and endemic grasses found in and away from wheat fields in Minas Gerais. A total 1,368 diseased samples were collected (976 leaves of wheat and grasses and 392 wheat heads) which yielded a working collection of 564 Pyricularia isolates. We show that, contrary to earlier implications, PoT was rarely found on endemic grasses and, conversely, members of grass-adapted lineages were rarely found on wheat. Instead, most lineages were host-specialized with constituent isolates usually grouping according to their host-of-origin. With regard to the dominant role proposed for signalgrass in wheat blast epidemiology, we found only one PoT member in 67 isolates collected from signalgrass grown away from wheat fields, and only three members of Urochloa-adapted lineages among hundreds of isolates from wheat. Cross-inoculation assays on wheat and a signalgrass used in pastures (U. brizantha) suggested that the limited cross-infection observed in the field may be due to innate compatibility differences. Whether or not the observed level of cross-infection would be sufficient to provide an inoculum reservoir, or serve as a bridge between wheat growing regions, is questionable and, therefore, deserves further investigation.
Thesagro: Trigo
Epidemiologia
NAL Thesaurus: Wheat
Epidemiology
Pyricularia
Palavras-chave: Gramíneas endêmicas
Patógenos fúngicos
Biologia de Populações
Fungal Pathogens
Population Biology
Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1094/PHYTO-01-23-0024-R
Tipo do material: Artigo de periódico
Acesso: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:Artigo em periódico indexado (CNPT)

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