AI Article Synopsis

  • Plant pathogens significantly reduce crop productivity, resulting in potential food shortages for humans and animals.
  • While chemical control is commonly used, its overuse leads to fungal resistance and environmental issues, making accurate detection of pathogens crucial for effective disease management.
  • The review highlights the limitations of traditional detection methods and emphasizes the promise of innovative nanoparticle-based biosensors, particularly electrochemical and optical technologies, in enhancing early pathogen detection and informing better management strategies.

Article Abstract

Plant pathogens are a major reason of reduced crop productivity and may lead to a shortage of food for both human and animal consumption. Although chemical control remains the main method to reduce foliar fungal disease incidence, frequent use can lead to loss of susceptibility in the fungal population. Furthermore, over-spraying can cause environmental contamination and poses a heavy financial burden on growers. To prevent or control disease epidemics, it is important for growers to be able to detect causal pathogen accurately, sensitively, and rapidly, so that the best practice disease management strategies can be chosen and enacted. To reach this goal, many culture-dependent, biochemical, and molecular methods have been developed for plant pathogen detection. However, these methods lack accuracy, specificity, reliability, and rapidity, and they are generally not suitable for analysis. Accordingly, there is strong interest in developing biosensing systems for early and accurate pathogen detection. There is also great scope to translate innovative nanoparticle-based biosensor approaches developed initially for human disease diagnostics for early detection of plant disease-causing pathogens. In this review, we compare conventional methods used in plant disease diagnostics with new sensing technologies in particular with deeper focus on electrochemical and optical biosensors that may be applied for plant pathogen detection and management. In addition, we discuss challenges facing biosensors and new capability the technology provides to informing disease management strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8207201PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2021.636245DOI Listing

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