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Glomerella graminicola

Glomerella graminicola is an economically important crop parasite affecting both wheat and maize where it causes the plant disease Anthracnose Leaf Blight.

Glomerella graminicola
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Division:
Subphylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
G. graminicola
Binomial name
Glomerella graminicola
D.J. Politis (1975)
Synonyms

Colletotrichopsis graminicola (Ces.) Munt.-Cvetk. (1953)
Colletotrichum graminicola (Ces.) G.W. Wilson (1914)
Dicladium graminicola Ces. [as 'graminicolum'] (1852)
Steirochaete graminicola (Ces.) Sacc. (1923)
Vermicularia melicae Fuckel

Host and symptoms edit

G. graminicola is an anamorphic fungus which is identified as Colletotrichum graminicola in the teleomorphic phase. It is the anamorphic phase that causes anthracnose in many cereal species. While the main host of this disease is maize, it can also affect other cereals and grasses,[1] such as sorghum, ryegrass, bluegrass, barley, wheat, and some cultivars of fescue where the production of fruiting bodies cause symptoms to appear in the host plant. [2] Corn anthracnose leaf blight is the most common stalk disease in maize and occurs most frequently in reduced-till or no-till fields.[3]

 
Anthracnose stalk rot

Symptoms can vary depending on which part of the growing season the corn is in.[4]

Early in the growing season, the main symptom is foliar leaf blight. This often appears as 1 inch (25 mm) long and 12 inch (13 mm) wide oval or spindle-shaped water-soaked lesions on the lower leaves of the plant. This tissue can become necrotic and has the potential to spread throughout the entire leaf, causing it to yellow and die.[5] They are light brown in color, with margins that appear dark brown or purple. If this persists, black fruiting bodies will appear in the center of the lesion.[6]

The mid-season symptoms appear several weeks after corn produces tassels, when there will be a top die-back if the infection has spread throughout many parts of the plant.[4] In this dieback, the entire plant will become necrotic and die, beginning at the tassel and working its way down the entire stalk to the lowest leaves.

Late in the growing season, another major symptom of this disease appears: stalk rot.[4] It can first be seen as a reflective black stripe on the internodes of the stalk,[7] and can make the stalk soft, causing the plants to easily lodge in heavy precipitation or a wind event.

Morphology edit

Stromata edit

  • 70-300 μm in diameter
  • Bear prominent, dark, septate spines (setae) up to 100 μm long.

Conidia edit

  • Developing at the base of the spines
  • Hyaline to pale yellow, unicellular, sickle-shaped, falcate to fusiform, tapered toward both ends
  • 3-5 x 19-29 μm.

Phialides edit

  • Unicellular, hylanine and cylindrical,
  • 4-8 x 8-20 μm.

Growth on PDA edit

Growth on potato dextrose agar is:

  • Gray and feltlike
  • Conidia and appressoria are numerous when culture are well aerated, and sclerotia sometimes occur.
  • Appressoria are diagnostic: they are tawny brown, irregular-shaped in edge, prominent, and terminal on thickened hyphae.

Disease cycle edit

In the spring, fruiting structures (acervuli) form from corn residue and produce banana-shaped[8] spores (conidia) that are dispersed by wind blown raindrops and splashing.[9] Conidial spores infect young plants through the epidermis or stomata.[10] Anthracnose develops rapidly in cloudy, overcast conditions with high temperatures and humidity. In optimal environmental conditions, conidia can germinate in as little as 6–8 hours in 100% humidity.[9] Initial necrotic spots or lesions can be seen within 72 hours after infection by conidia.[11] Lower leaves that develop lesions provide conidial spores and cause secondary infections on the upper leaves and stalk. Vascular infections primarily occur from wounds caused by stalk-boring insects, such as the larvae of the European corn borer, allowing for conidia to infect and colonize the xylem.[12] From this, anthracnose top die back (vascular wilt) or stalk rot can occur. In the fall, C. graminicola survives as a saprophyte on corn leaf residue. The pathogen can also overwinter on corn stalks as conidia in an extracellular secretion. The secretion prevents conidia from desiccating and protects them from unfavorable environmental conditions.[9] Overwintering on corn residue serves as a vital source of primary inoculum for the leaf blight phase in the spring. The cycle will start all over again when susceptible corn seedlings emerge from the ground in the spring.

Environment edit

There are several conditions that favor the infection and persistence of anthracnose leaf blight. When high temperatures and long periods of wet weather or high humidity occur, these are the most ideal conditions for its spread and survival.[13] A specific temperature range is required in order for the pathogen to successfully infect the host plant, between 25 and 30 °C (77 and 86 °F). Two other things, those being prolonged periods of low sunlight due to overcast conditions, or an already weakened host due to the infection of other diseases or pests will also favor infection of the host plant.[14] In addition to this, there are two cultural practices that will also favor the disease. Continuous plantings of the same host without introducing crop rotation and no-till fields will favor persistence of the pathogen between growing seasons.[15]

Disease management edit

Since C. graminicola is found to survive on corn residue, specifically on the soil surface, one of the most effective methods of control is a one-year minimum of crop rotation to reduce anthracnose leaf blight.[7] A study in 2009 showed more severe symptoms of leaf blight due to C. graminicola when grown on fields previously used for corn in comparison to fields previously used for soybean.[16] There are cultural practices that can be taken to disrupt the primary inoculum phase and conidial spore infection of the host plant, and these include using hybrid cultivars resistant to the pathogen[15] and keeping the host plants healthy and controlling other pests to keep them resilient to infection. While there are hybrids resistant to the leaf blight, these same hybrids are often not resistant to the stalk rot that occurs later in the growing season.[17] There is also a cultural practice that disrupts the saprophytic stage of the pathogen, and this involves plowing the leftover corn residue deep into the soil and then using a one-year crop rotation away from the same host plant that was just used in that field.[15] These methods move the saprophytic stage into the soil, where it is out-competed by other organisms, and does not survive.[16] Biological control may also be possible, though the large-scale implementation of this method has not been studied. This is done by applying yeasts to the leaf surfaces that are showing symptoms of the leaf blight.[9] 

Importance edit

Corn anthracnose caused by C. graminicola is a disease present worldwide. This disease can affect all parts of the plant and can develop at any time during the growing season. This disease is typically seen in leaf blight or stalk rot form. Before the 1970s, Anthracnose was not an issue in North America. In the early 1970s, north-central and eastern U.S was hit with severe epidemics. Within 2 years of C. graminicola's appearance in Western-Indiana, sweet corn production for canning companies were nearly wiped out and production no longer exists there today.[9]

Anthracnose stalk rot was seen in many U.S corn fields in the 1980s and 1990s. A survey conducted in Illinois in 1982 and 1983 found that 34 to 46% of rotted corn stalks contained C. graminicola.[18] Estimates on yield grain losses from anthracnose leaf blight and stalk rot range from zero to over 40%. This is dependent on hybrid, environment, timing of infection, and other stresses.

Pathogenesis edit

Once conidia germinate on corn leaves, a germ tube differentiates and develops into an appresoria and allows C. graminicola to penetrate epidermal cells.[19] Germination and appressorium formation occur best in the temperature range 15–30 °C (59–86 °F))[9] Penetration occurs in a much narrower temperature range 25–30 °C (77–86 °F). In order to penetrate the cell wall, the fungus first pumps melanin into the walls of the appressorium to create turgor pressure in the appressorium. The melanin allows water into the appressorium cell but nothing out. This builds up an incredible amount of turgor pressure which the fungus then uses to push a hyphae through the corn cell wall. This is called the penetration peg. The penetration peg then grows, extends through the cell extracting nutrients and the host cell wall dies.[10] Hyphae migrate from epidermal cells to mesophyll cells. As a defense response, the cells produce papillae to prevent cell entry but is typically not seen successful. It is believed C. graminicola has a biotrophic phase because the plasma membrane of the epidermal cells is not immediately penetrated after invasion into the epidermal cell wall. Between 48–72 hours after infection, C. graminicola shifted from biotrophic growth to nectrotrophy (lesions appear). This is when secondary hyphae invade cell walls and intercellular spaces.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ Leonard, K. J. (1976). "Effects of Temperature and Host Maturity on Lesion Development of Colletotrichum graminicola on Corn". Phytopathology. 66 (5): 635. doi:10.1094/phyto-66-635. ISSN 0031-949X.
  2. ^ "Anthracnose Stalk Rot". www.pioneer.com. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  3. ^ "Anthracnose Leaf Blight | Field Crops". fieldcrops.cals.cornell.edu. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  4. ^ a b c "Anthracnose Stalk Rot". www.pioneer.com. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  5. ^ "Anthracnose Leaf Blight | Field Crops". fieldcrops.cals.cornell.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  6. ^ "Anthracnose Leaf Blight of Corn". cropprotectionnetwork.org. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  7. ^ a b . ohioline.osu.edu. Archived from the original on 2015-07-30. Retrieved 2015-10-20.
  8. ^ . www2.ca.uky.edu. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Bergstrom, Gary C.; Nicholson, Ralph L. (1999). "The Biology of Corn Anthracnose: Knowledge to Exploit for Improved Management". Plant Disease. 83 (7): 596–608. doi:10.1094/pdis.1999.83.7.596. PMID 30845609.
  10. ^ a b "THE VAILLANCOURT LAB". THE VAILLANCOURT LAB. University of Kentucky.
  11. ^ a b Mims, C. W.; Vaillancourt, L. J. (2002). "Ultrastructural Characterization of Infection and Colonization of Maize Leaves by Colletotrichum graminicola, and by a C. graminicola Pathogenicity Mutant". Phytopathology. 92 (7): 803–812. doi:10.1094/phyto.2002.92.7.803. PMID 18943278.
  12. ^ Carson, M. L. (1999). White, D. G. (ed.). Compendium of Corn Diseases: Anthracnose Leaf Blight. St. Paul, MN: American Phytopathological Society. pp. 21–22.
  13. ^ "Anthracnose leaf blight on corn". extension.umn.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  14. ^ Bergstrom, Gary C.; Nicholson, Ralph L. (July 1999). "The Biology of Corn Anthracnose: Knowledge to Exploit for Improved Management". Plant Disease. 83 (7): 596–608. doi:10.1094/pdis.1999.83.7.596. ISSN 0191-2917. PMID 30845609.
  15. ^ a b c Jirak-Peterson, Jennifer C.; Esker, Paul D. (May 2011). "Tillage, Crop Rotation, and Hybrid Effects on Residue and Corn Anthracnose Occurrence in Wisconsin". Plant Disease. 95 (5): 601–610. doi:10.1094/pdis-11-10-0837. ISSN 0191-2917. PMID 30731957.
  16. ^ a b Jirak-Peterson, Jennifer C.; Esker, Paul D. (2011-02-08). "Tillage, Crop Rotation, and Hybrid Effects on Residue and Corn Anthracnose Occurrence in Wisconsin". Plant Disease. 95 (5): 601–610. doi:10.1094/PDIS-11-10-0837. PMID 30731957.
  17. ^ . 2015-07-30. Archived from the original on 2015-07-30. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  18. ^ Anderson, B; White, D (1987). "Fungi associated with cornstalks in Illinois in 1982 and 1983". Plant Disease. 71 (2): 135–137. doi:10.1094/pd-71-0135.
  19. ^ Politis, D.J.; Wheeler, Harry (1973). "Ultrastructural study of penetration of maize leaves by Colletotrichum graminicola". Physiological Plant Pathology. 3 (4): 465–471. doi:10.1016/0048-4059(73)90056-8.

External links edit

  • Index Fungorum
  • The Vaillancourt Lab
  • Japanese Fungi on Plants No.36
  • Colletotrichum dot org
  • fungi.ensembl.org

glomerella, graminicola, economically, important, crop, parasite, affecting, both, wheat, maize, where, causes, plant, disease, anthracnose, leaf, blight, scientific, classification, kingdom, fungi, division, ascomycota, subphylum, pezizomycotina, class, sorda. Glomerella graminicola is an economically important crop parasite affecting both wheat and maize where it causes the plant disease Anthracnose Leaf Blight Glomerella graminicola Scientific classification Kingdom Fungi Division Ascomycota Subphylum Pezizomycotina Class Sordariomycetes Order Glomerellales Family Glomerellaceae Genus Glomerella Species G graminicola Binomial name Glomerella graminicolaD J Politis 1975 Synonyms Colletotrichopsis graminicola Ces Munt Cvetk 1953 Colletotrichum graminicola Ces G W Wilson 1914 Dicladium graminicola Ces as graminicolum 1852 Steirochaete graminicola Ces Sacc 1923 Vermicularia melicae Fuckel Contents 1 Host and symptoms 2 Morphology 2 1 Stromata 2 2 Conidia 2 3 Phialides 2 4 Growth on PDA 3 Disease cycle 4 Environment 5 Disease management 6 Importance 7 Pathogenesis 8 References 9 External linksHost and symptoms editG graminicola is an anamorphic fungus which is identified as Colletotrichum graminicola in the teleomorphic phase It is the anamorphic phase that causes anthracnose in many cereal species While the main host of this disease is maize it can also affect other cereals and grasses 1 such as sorghum ryegrass bluegrass barley wheat and some cultivars of fescue where the production of fruiting bodies cause symptoms to appear in the host plant 2 Corn anthracnose leaf blight is the most common stalk disease in maize and occurs most frequently in reduced till or no till fields 3 nbsp Anthracnose stalk rot Symptoms can vary depending on which part of the growing season the corn is in 4 Early in the growing season the main symptom is foliar leaf blight This often appears as 1 inch 25 mm long and 1 2 inch 13 mm wide oval or spindle shaped water soaked lesions on the lower leaves of the plant This tissue can become necrotic and has the potential to spread throughout the entire leaf causing it to yellow and die 5 They are light brown in color with margins that appear dark brown or purple If this persists black fruiting bodies will appear in the center of the lesion 6 The mid season symptoms appear several weeks after corn produces tassels when there will be a top die back if the infection has spread throughout many parts of the plant 4 In this dieback the entire plant will become necrotic and die beginning at the tassel and working its way down the entire stalk to the lowest leaves Late in the growing season another major symptom of this disease appears stalk rot 4 It can first be seen as a reflective black stripe on the internodes of the stalk 7 and can make the stalk soft causing the plants to easily lodge in heavy precipitation or a wind event Morphology editStromata edit 70 300 mm in diameter Bear prominent dark septate spines setae up to 100 mm long Conidia edit Developing at the base of the spines Hyaline to pale yellow unicellular sickle shaped falcate to fusiform tapered toward both ends 3 5 x 19 29 mm Phialides edit Unicellular hylanine and cylindrical 4 8 x 8 20 mm Growth on PDA edit Growth on potato dextrose agar is Gray and feltlike Conidia and appressoria are numerous when culture are well aerated and sclerotia sometimes occur Appressoria are diagnostic they are tawny brown irregular shaped in edge prominent and terminal on thickened hyphae Disease cycle editIn the spring fruiting structures acervuli form from corn residue and produce banana shaped 8 spores conidia that are dispersed by wind blown raindrops and splashing 9 Conidial spores infect young plants through the epidermis or stomata 10 Anthracnose develops rapidly in cloudy overcast conditions with high temperatures and humidity In optimal environmental conditions conidia can germinate in as little as 6 8 hours in 100 humidity 9 Initial necrotic spots or lesions can be seen within 72 hours after infection by conidia 11 Lower leaves that develop lesions provide conidial spores and cause secondary infections on the upper leaves and stalk Vascular infections primarily occur from wounds caused by stalk boring insects such as the larvae of the European corn borer allowing for conidia to infect and colonize the xylem 12 From this anthracnose top die back vascular wilt or stalk rot can occur In the fall C graminicola survives as a saprophyte on corn leaf residue The pathogen can also overwinter on corn stalks as conidia in an extracellular secretion The secretion prevents conidia from desiccating and protects them from unfavorable environmental conditions 9 Overwintering on corn residue serves as a vital source of primary inoculum for the leaf blight phase in the spring The cycle will start all over again when susceptible corn seedlings emerge from the ground in the spring Environment editThere are several conditions that favor the infection and persistence of anthracnose leaf blight When high temperatures and long periods of wet weather or high humidity occur these are the most ideal conditions for its spread and survival 13 A specific temperature range is required in order for the pathogen to successfully infect the host plant between 25 and 30 C 77 and 86 F Two other things those being prolonged periods of low sunlight due to overcast conditions or an already weakened host due to the infection of other diseases or pests will also favor infection of the host plant 14 In addition to this there are two cultural practices that will also favor the disease Continuous plantings of the same host without introducing crop rotation and no till fields will favor persistence of the pathogen between growing seasons 15 Disease management editSince C graminicola is found to survive on corn residue specifically on the soil surface one of the most effective methods of control is a one year minimum of crop rotation to reduce anthracnose leaf blight 7 A study in 2009 showed more severe symptoms of leaf blight due to C graminicola when grown on fields previously used for corn in comparison to fields previously used for soybean 16 There are cultural practices that can be taken to disrupt the primary inoculum phase and conidial spore infection of the host plant and these include using hybrid cultivars resistant to the pathogen 15 and keeping the host plants healthy and controlling other pests to keep them resilient to infection While there are hybrids resistant to the leaf blight these same hybrids are often not resistant to the stalk rot that occurs later in the growing season 17 There is also a cultural practice that disrupts the saprophytic stage of the pathogen and this involves plowing the leftover corn residue deep into the soil and then using a one year crop rotation away from the same host plant that was just used in that field 15 These methods move the saprophytic stage into the soil where it is out competed by other organisms and does not survive 16 Biological control may also be possible though the large scale implementation of this method has not been studied This is done by applying yeasts to the leaf surfaces that are showing symptoms of the leaf blight 9 Importance editCorn anthracnose caused by C graminicola is a disease present worldwide This disease can affect all parts of the plant and can develop at any time during the growing season This disease is typically seen in leaf blight or stalk rot form Before the 1970s Anthracnose was not an issue in North America In the early 1970s north central and eastern U S was hit with severe epidemics Within 2 years of C graminicola s appearance in Western Indiana sweet corn production for canning companies were nearly wiped out and production no longer exists there today 9 Anthracnose stalk rot was seen in many U S corn fields in the 1980s and 1990s A survey conducted in Illinois in 1982 and 1983 found that 34 to 46 of rotted corn stalks contained C graminicola 18 Estimates on yield grain losses from anthracnose leaf blight and stalk rot range from zero to over 40 This is dependent on hybrid environment timing of infection and other stresses Pathogenesis editOnce conidia germinate on corn leaves a germ tube differentiates and develops into an appresoria and allows C graminicola to penetrate epidermal cells 19 Germination and appressorium formation occur best in the temperature range 15 30 C 59 86 F 9 Penetration occurs in a much narrower temperature range 25 30 C 77 86 F In order to penetrate the cell wall the fungus first pumps melanin into the walls of the appressorium to create turgor pressure in the appressorium The melanin allows water into the appressorium cell but nothing out This builds up an incredible amount of turgor pressure which the fungus then uses to push a hyphae through the corn cell wall This is called the penetration peg The penetration peg then grows extends through the cell extracting nutrients and the host cell wall dies 10 Hyphae migrate from epidermal cells to mesophyll cells As a defense response the cells produce papillae to prevent cell entry but is typically not seen successful It is believed C graminicola has a biotrophic phase because the plasma membrane of the epidermal cells is not immediately penetrated after invasion into the epidermal cell wall Between 48 72 hours after infection C graminicola shifted from biotrophic growth to nectrotrophy lesions appear This is when secondary hyphae invade cell walls and intercellular spaces 11 References edit Leonard K J 1976 Effects of Temperature and Host Maturity on Lesion Development of Colletotrichum graminicola on Corn Phytopathology 66 5 635 doi 10 1094 phyto 66 635 ISSN 0031 949X Anthracnose Stalk Rot www pioneer com Retrieved 2015 11 11 Anthracnose Leaf Blight Field Crops fieldcrops cals cornell edu Retrieved 2015 11 11 a b c Anthracnose Stalk Rot www pioneer com Retrieved 2020 12 12 Anthracnose Leaf Blight Field Crops fieldcrops cals cornell edu Retrieved 2020 12 12 Anthracnose Leaf Blight of Corn cropprotectionnetwork org Retrieved 2020 12 12 a b Anthracnose Leaf Blight and Stalk Rot of Corn AC 0022 01 ohioline osu edu Archived from the original on 2015 07 30 Retrieved 2015 10 20 information page www2 ca uky edu Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2015 11 11 a b c d e f Bergstrom Gary C Nicholson Ralph L 1999 The Biology of Corn Anthracnose Knowledge to Exploit for Improved Management Plant Disease 83 7 596 608 doi 10 1094 pdis 1999 83 7 596 PMID 30845609 a b THE VAILLANCOURT LAB THE VAILLANCOURT LAB University of Kentucky a b Mims C W Vaillancourt L J 2002 Ultrastructural Characterization of Infection and Colonization of Maize Leaves by Colletotrichum graminicola and by a C graminicola Pathogenicity Mutant Phytopathology 92 7 803 812 doi 10 1094 phyto 2002 92 7 803 PMID 18943278 Carson M L 1999 White D G ed Compendium of Corn Diseases Anthracnose Leaf Blight St Paul MN American Phytopathological Society pp 21 22 Anthracnose leaf blight on corn extension umn edu Retrieved 2020 12 12 Bergstrom Gary C Nicholson Ralph L July 1999 The Biology of Corn Anthracnose Knowledge to Exploit for Improved Management Plant Disease 83 7 596 608 doi 10 1094 pdis 1999 83 7 596 ISSN 0191 2917 PMID 30845609 a b c Jirak Peterson Jennifer C Esker Paul D May 2011 Tillage Crop Rotation and Hybrid Effects on Residue and Corn Anthracnose Occurrence in Wisconsin Plant Disease 95 5 601 610 doi 10 1094 pdis 11 10 0837 ISSN 0191 2917 PMID 30731957 a b Jirak Peterson Jennifer C Esker Paul D 2011 02 08 Tillage Crop Rotation and Hybrid Effects on Residue and Corn Anthracnose Occurrence in Wisconsin Plant Disease 95 5 601 610 doi 10 1094 PDIS 11 10 0837 PMID 30731957 Anthracnose Leaf Blight and Stalk Rot of Corn AC 0022 01 2015 07 30 Archived from the original on 2015 07 30 Retrieved 2020 12 12 Anderson B White D 1987 Fungi associated with cornstalks in Illinois in 1982 and 1983 Plant Disease 71 2 135 137 doi 10 1094 pd 71 0135 Politis D J Wheeler Harry 1973 Ultrastructural study of penetration of maize leaves by Colletotrichum graminicola Physiological Plant Pathology 3 4 465 471 doi 10 1016 0048 4059 73 90056 8 External links editIndex Fungorum USDA ARS Fungal Database The Vaillancourt Lab Japanese Fungi on Plants No 36 Colletotrichum dot org fungi ensembl org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Glomerella graminicola amp oldid 1195432320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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