Publications by authors named "Xiaotong Gai"

Article Synopsis
  • Cigar tobacco is becoming a significant economic crop in Yunnan, China, but issues like root rot have been observed, affecting crop health with disease incidence averaging 10%.
  • Symptoms of root rot include yellowing and wilting bottom leaves, brown roots, leading to dark brown necrosis as the disease progresses.
  • Research involved isolating a fungal pathogen from infected plants, which revealed morphological and molecular characteristics consistent with the fungus S. terrestris, a known cause of root rot in tobacco.
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A Gram-negative, aerobic, motile with paired polar flagella and rod-shaped bacterium strain (56D2) was isolated from tobacco planting soil in Yunnan, PR China. Major fatty acids were C 7 (summed feature 3), C and C  7 (summed feature 8). The polar lipid profile of strain 56D2 consisted of diphosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, one unidentified aminophospholipid and one unidentified glycolipid.

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Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) was an important economic crop in China. A survey in Yunnan Province in the last several years showed that the incidence of tobacco root rot was 3 to 30%.

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Three Gram-stain-negative, motile, with amphilophotrichous flagella, and rod-shaped bacteria (LJ1, LJ2 and LJ3) were isolated from lower leaves with black spots on flue-cured tobacco in Yunnan, PR China. The results of phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA gene sequences indicate that all the strains from tobacco were closely related to the type strains of the group within the lineage and LJ2 has the highest sequence identities with DSM 50259 (99.92 %), Pc19-1 (99.

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is a main causative agent of tobacco root rot, severely affecting tobacco growth. Here, 200 strains were isolated and examined for their virulence toward tobacco plants. These strains were divided into disease class 1-3 (weak virulence), 4-6 (moderate virulence), and 7-9 (strong virulence).

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Tobacco is one of the most significant non-food cash crops (Lu et al. 2020). In March 2022, cigar tobacco plants showing characteristic symptoms of vascular discoloration, stem rotting, leaf wilting and rotting were observed in Tengchong city (N 25°3'26″, E 98°25'6″) of Yunnan province, China (Fig.

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Begomoviruses (family Geminiviridae) cause serious diseases in many crops. In this study, we characterized a begomovirus isolated from a tobacco plant with leaf curl in Puer, Yunnan Province, China. Analysis of the viral genome obtained from a symptomatic Nicotiana tabacum plant showed that it belonged to a novel monopartite begomovirus.

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Article Synopsis
  • The complete genome sequence of the bacterial strain LLRS-1, which causes bacterial wilt in flue-cured tobacco, is presented for the first time in China.
  • This strain has a total genome size of approximately 5.7 million base pairs, consisting of a circular chromosome and a megaplasmid.
  • The genome includes a diverse set of genetic elements, featuring over 5,190 protein-coding genes and various types of RNA, demonstrating its genetic complexity.
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Fusarium verticillioides, an important maize pathogen produces fumonisins and causes stalk and ear rot; thus, we are aimed to clarify its infection cycle by assessing enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) expression in stalk and ear rot strains. Maize seeds were inoculated with stable and strongly pathogenic transformants. To investigate the degree of infection, inoculated plants were observed under a stereo fluorescence microscope, and affected tissue strains were detected using PCR.

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AG1 IA is a soil-borne fungal phytopathogen that can significantly harm crops resulting in economic loss. This species overwinters in grass roots and diseased plants, and produces sclerotia that infect future crops. AG1 IA does not produce spores; therefore, understanding the molecular mechanism of sclerotia formation is important for crop disease control.

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