First Report of sp., Causing Stem Rot on Zucc., in Mexico.

Plant Dis

CONACYT, Instituto Politécnico Nacional CIIDIR, Unidad Oaxaca , Mexico City, Mexico City, Mexico;

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Zucc. (agave tobalá) is a crucial wild species for mezcal production and is primarily found in Oaxaca and Puebla, Mexico; however, a disease outbreak causing dry stem rot has affected 45% of a 10-acre commercial field in Villa Sola de Vega.
  • Researchers isolated the pathogen from symptomatic plants by disinfecting tissue samples, culturing them on potato dextrose agar, and identifying several monoconidial isolates with specific morphological characteristics.
  • Three of these isolates underwent further tests for phylogenetic analysis and pathogenicity, and were deposited in a culture collection for future study.

Article Abstract

Zucc., also known as "agave tobalá", is an endemic species in the Mexican states of Oaxaca and Puebla and is one of the most important wild species for producing the Mexican alcoholic distillate called mezcal. In September 2021, symptoms of dry stem rot and subsequent death of plants were observed, in a commercial field of 10 acres located in the municipality of Villa Sola de Vega, Oaxaca, Mexico. The disease incidence was 45%. Twenty symptomatic agave stem plants were sampled to isolate the pathogen. Pieces (5 × 5 mm) of the symptomatic tissues from diseased plants were surface disinfested with 1% NaOCl (60 s) and 70% ethanol (1 min), rinsed with sterile water (2 × 60 s), placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA Bioxon®, Mexico), and incubated at 25°C for 6 days with natural light. Next, we prepared single-spore derived cultures on PDA and carnation leaf-piece agar (CLA). -like colonies were consistently isolated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and 14 monoconidial isolates were obtained. On PDA, aerial mycelium was white to beige with diffuse pink pigment in the center of the culture and colonies were appressed with a regular shape after 7 days of incubation at 25℃. Macroconidia (n=100) were falcate, almost straight, 1 to 4-septate, 18.5 to 47.9 × 3.9-5.7 μm. Microconidia (n=100) were ellipsoidal to subcylindrical, slightly curved, hyaline, 8 to 16 × 3.5 to 4.5 μm, 0 to 1-septate, and grouped in false heads. Chlamydospores were globose to subglobose, terminal or intercalary in hyphae, and were solitary or in chains. Morphological features were consistent with the description of spp. (Crous et al. 2021; Sandoval-Denis et al. 2019). Three isolates were selected for multilocus phylogenetic analysis and pathogenicity tests. Isolates were deposited as IPN-AP1, IPN-AP2, and IPN-AP3 in the Culture Collection of Phytopathogenic Fungi of Plant Pathology Laboratory of the CIIDIR-Oaxaca of the Instituto Politécnico Nacional. For molecular identification, genomic DNA was extracted, and partial sequences of translation elongation factor 1-alpha () and the second largest subunit of RNA polymerase II () genes were amplified and sequenced with the primer sets EF1-728F/EF1-986R (Carbone and Kohn 1999) and RBP2-5F/RPB2-7R (Liu et al. 1999), respectively. A phylogenetic tree using concatenated and sequences was constructed for spp. based on Maximum Likelihood. The phylogenetic analysis suggested that the three isolates belong to a new species, closely related to , as they formed a sister clade with this species. The sequences were deposited in GenBank with accession nos. OP902594 to OP902596 for , and OP902591 to OP902593 for . A pathogenicity test for each isolate was performed by inoculating five healthy plants (1-year-old) grown in pots. Conidia were cultured on PDA for 7 days and the conidial solution was prepared with sterile water and adjusted to 1×10 spores/ml. A total of 1 ml of the conidial suspension was placed on the basal stem of each plant. Five plants mock-inoculated with sterilize water served as the controls. All plants were kept in a greenhouse for 45 days at temperatures ranging from 20 to 30°C. At 35 days after inoculation, dry stem rot was visible on the inoculated plants, whereas the control plants remained asymptomatic. The pathogenicity test was repeated twice with similar results. The fungi were reisolated from the infected plants and found to be morphologically identical to the isolates used for inoculation, fulfilling Koch's postulates. spp., has been previously associated with dry root rot in in South Africa (Guarnaccia et al. 2021) as well as rot of Cactaceae and other succulent plants in Iran (Kamali-Sarvestani et al. 2022). To our knowledge, this is the first report of sp. causing stem rot of in Mexico and worldwide. Further studies should focus on determining the distribution, impact, and management of this disease in the production areas of agave tobalá in Mexico.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-07-24-1393-PDNDOI Listing

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