Zinnia elegans Jacq. plants are infected by a fungus that causes dark red spots with necrosis on leaves, particularly in late spring to the middle of summer in the Mid-South of the United States. This fungal disease causes the leaves to wilt and eventually kills the plant. The fungus was isolated, cultured in potato dextrose broth, and identified as Nigrospora sphaerica by molecular techniques. Two major lactone metabolites (phomalactone and catenioblin A) were isolated from liquid culture of N. sphaerica isolated from Z. elegans. When injected into leaves of Z. elegans, phomalactone caused lesions similar to those of the fungus. The lesion sizes were proportional to the concentration of the phomalactone. Phomalactone, but not catenioblin A, was phytotoxic to Z. elegans and other plant species by inhibition of seedling growth and by causing electrolyte leakage from photosynthetic tissues of both Z. elegans leaves and cucumber cotyledons. This latter effect may be related to the wilting caused by the fungus in mature Z. elegans plants. Phomalactone was moderately fungicidal to Coletotrichum fragariae and two Phomopsis species, indicating that the compound may keep certain other fungi from encroaching into plant tissue that N. sphaerica has infected. Production of large amounts of phomalactone by N. sphaerica contributes to the pathogenic behavior of this fungus, and may have other ecological functions in the interaction of N. sphaerica with other fungi. This is the first report of isolation of catenioblin A from a plant pathogenic fungus. The function of catenioblin A is unclear, as it was neither significantly phyto- nor fungitoxic.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10886-015-0602-x | DOI Listing |
Plant Dis
December 2024
Honghe University, College of Biological and Agricultural Sciences, Mengzi, Yunnan, China;
The Asteraceae family plant Erigeron breviscapus (Vant.) Hand.-Mazz.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
October 2024
Organic Agricultural Division, National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Wanju 55635, Republic of Korea.
This study aimed to evaluate the enhancement of control by when was planted as a companion crop in cucumber greenhouses. The density and spatial distribution of and parasitized mummies were investigated across three treatment plots: (1) the simultaneous application of and cultivation of (parasitoid-zinnia plot); (2) the application of alone (parasitoid plot); and (3) a control plot (no application of both). maintained low densities in the parasitoid-zinnia plots, while its densities in the parasitoid plots initially decreased but rapidly increased thereafter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Plant Biol
September 2024
Department of Agriculture, Medicinal Plants and Drugs Research Institute, Shahid Beheshti University, Tehran, Iran.
This research was conducted to investigate the efficacy of putrescine (PUT) treatment (0, 1, 2, and 4 mM) on improving morphophysiological and biochemical characteristics of Zinnia elegans "State Fair" flowers under salt stress (0, 50, and 100 mM NaCl). The experiment was designed in a factorial setting under completely randomized design with 4 replications. The results showed that by increasing the salt stress intensity, the stress index (SSI) increased while morphological traits such as plant height decreased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Environ Interact
October 2024
Plant Protection Faculty College of Agriculture, Can Tho University Can Tho Vietnam.
This study evaluates the phytotoxic potential of methanolic extracts from six Asteraceae species: , , , , , . The extracts were tested at concentrations of 0.03, 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
October 2024
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs Key Laboratory of Pest Monitoring and Green Management, College of Plant Protection, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China.
Plant virus-derived vectors are rapid and cost-effective for protein expression and gene functional studies in plants, particularly for species that are difficult to genetically transform. However, few efficient viral vectors are available for functional studies in Asteraceae plants. Here, we identified a potyvirus named zinnia mild mottle virus (ZiMMV) from common zinnia (Zinnia elegans Jacq.
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