AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the detection of airborne fungal spores of Leptosphaeria species near oilseed rape fields in Poland and the UK, using specialized traps and qPCR techniques for accurate identification.
  • - Successful detection of ascospores was achieved even at low concentrations, but the effectiveness varied based on the primer pairs used, highlighting differences in sensitivity and specificity for detecting different subclades.
  • - The findings suggest that qPCR assays on spore traps can effectively monitor these pathogens before visible symptoms appear, emphasizing the need to choose appropriate primers based on local pathogen populations.

Article Abstract

Background: Detection of the inoculum of phytopathogens greatly assists in the management of diseases, but is difficult for pathogens with airborne fungal propagules. Here, we present experiments to determine the abundance and distribution frequencies of the ascospores of Leptosphaeria (Plenodomus) species that were collected on the tapes of volumetric Hirst-type traps near oilseed rape fields in Poznan, Poland and Harpenden, UK. Fungal detection and species discrimination were achieved using a SYBR-Green quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) with two different pairs of primers previously reported to differentiate Leptosphaeria maculans (Plenodomus lingam) or L. biglobosa (P. biglobosus).

Results: Detection was successful even at fewer than five spores per m of air. The primer pairs differed in the correlation coefficients obtained between DNA yields and the daily abundance of ascospores that were quantified by microscopy on duplicate halves of the spore trap tapes. Important differences in the specificity and sensitivity of the published SYBR-Green assays were also found, indicating that the Liu primers did not detect L. biglobosa subclade 'canadensis', whereas the Mahuku primers detected L. biglobosa subclade 'canadensis' and also the closely related Plenodomus dezfulensis.

Conclusions: Comparisons confirmed that application of qPCR assays to spore trap samples can be used for the early detection, discrimination and quantification of aerially dispersed L. maculans and L. biglobosa propagules before leaf spot symptoms are visible in winter oilseed rape fields. The specificity of the primers must be taken into consideration because the final result will greatly depend on the local population of the pathogen. © 2023 Society of Chemical Industry.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ps.7800DOI Listing

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