Laboratory experiments were conducted to determine (a) the baseline sensitivity of Rhizoctonia solani to thifluzamide and (b) the risk of the fungus developing resistance to the fungicide. Thifluzamide sensitivity was assessed for 227 isolates of R. solani collected from 12 provinces of China from 2007 to 2011. One insensitive isolate GD‐1 was obtained from the field, and the EC50 values of the 226 sensitive isolates had a unimodal frequency distribution with a mean of 0.0351 µg mL−1. Nine resistant mutants were generated using thifluzamide‐amended media or UV radiation in the laboratory. The resistance was stable for all mutants after 10 transfers on PDA medium. Fitness of the most resistant mutants was lower than that of the sensitive isolates, implying a lower competitiveness of the mutants relative to sensitive isolates in field. Cross‐resistance was detected between thifluzamide and the Succinate dehydrogenase inhibitors (SDHIs) fenfuram, carboxin, penflufen and boscalid, but not between thifluzamide and difenoconazole, carbendazim, propiconazol, SYP‐2815 (quinone outside inhibitor (QoI) fungicide developed in China), fluazinam, jinggangmycin, pyrimorph or mepronil. The SDHI fungicide fluopyram did not inhibit R. solani. Taken together, these results suggest that the risk of R. solani developing resistance to thifluzamide is low to moderate.
Phytophthora capsica is a destructive oomycete plant pathogen that causes huge losses to crop production worldwide. However, the novel fungicide SYP-14288 has shown excellent activity against various stages of the oomycete life cycle as well against fungal plant pathogens. The current study utilized isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation technology to generate proteome profiles of P. capsici in the presence or absence of SYP-14288 in order to gain a greater understanding of the SYP-14288 mode of action. A total of 1,443 individual proteins were identified during the investigation, of which 599 were considered to have significantly altered expression. Further investigation using Cluster of Orthologous Groups of proteins analysis and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes pathway analysis indicated most of the proteins with altered expression were associated with carbohydrate metabolism, energy metabolism and their downstream biological functions, especially with regard to oxidoreductase activity and subsequent adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production associated pathways. Quantitative expression analysis using qRT-PCR validated the proteomic data. These results seem to indicate that SYP-14288 treatment caused a shift in energy metabolism that resulted in the activation of compensatory mechanisms affecting carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. The study also found evidence that the up-regulation of transmembrane transporters and proteins associated with stress response might also be coopted to compensate for the disrupted proton gradient and other downstream effects. Taken together these results provide strong evidence that SYP-14288 has a similar mode of action to the oxidative phosphorylation uncoupler Fluazinam but further investigation, including molecular studies, is required to completely characterize the SYP-14288 mode of action in P. capsici. However, the proteomic data collected in the current study does provide important insight into the overall effect of SYP-14288 in P. capsici, which could be useful for the registration and application of this novel fungicide.
Brown ring patch, caused by Waitea circinata var. circinata, is a recently described disease of turf grass (1,2). The disease was first reported in Japan in 2005 (2) and then in the United States (1). In late May to early September 2011, large yellow rings (20 to 30 cm in diameter) were observed on creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifera) and Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis) growing at the Qinghe Bay golf course, Beijing, China. Leaf blades turned from yellow to brown as the disease developed, and eventually died. The disease incidence was estimated at 20 to 30%. The rings became continuous on creeping bentgrass and Kentucky bluegrass in several putting greens. The same symptom was observed on the lawn of China Agricultural University. Symptomatic leaves were collected and incubated in high humidity at 25°C until mycelia developed. The leaves were then disinfested in 1% NaClO for 1 min, rinsed with sterile water three times, and placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Four isolates were obtained, including one isolate from the lawn of China Agricultural University (cau-1), and three from Qinghe Bay golf course (qhw-1, qhw-2, and qhw-3). The colonies that formed on PDA changed from white to orange over time, and minute orange to brown sclerotia (approx. 2 to 3 mm in diameter) formed after 2 weeks at 25°C. These characteristics were similar to W. circinata var. circinata (1,2). DNA was extracted from each isolate using a CTAB extraction method (3) and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions were amplified with the ITS1/ITS4 universal primers. The ITS sequences of the isolated fungi (Accession Nos. JQ964235 and JQ964236) had 99 to 100% homology with the sequences of W. circinata in GenBank (Accession Nos. EU591763 and HQ207169). Pathogen inocula were prepared by inoculating autoclaved oat grains with strains qhw-1 and cau-1 respectively, followed by 4 days of incubation at 25°C. Each inoculum was placed in five spots in a uniform arrangement (5 g grain inoculum per spot) on soil in a 40 × 60 cm tray, followed by sowing bluegrass seed. In another experiment, 4-week-old bentgrass was transplanted into soil infested with 5 g grain inoculum in the middle of a 20-cm diameter pot (non-colonized grain was used as a control). There were five replicates for each isolate. Plants were then incubated in a growth chamber at 26°C and high relative humidity (>90%). After 5 to 6 days, the grass in the inoculated pots and trays began to turn yellow, and then became chlorotic and necrotic as the disease developed. Orange sclerotia were observed on the bluegrass leaves by the eighth day, and all the bentgrass turned chlorotic by the tenth day. After 2 weeks, brown ring patches formed in the trays with inoculated bluegrass. Waitea circinata var. circinata was reisolated from all inoculated plants and confirmed by morphological observation and the ITS sequences analysis as described above, while no symptoms were observed on the control plants and no isolate was obtained from them. To our knowledge, this is the first report of W. circinata var. circinata infecting turf grass in China. References: (1) K. A. De La Cerda et al. Plant Dis. 91:791, 2007. (2) T. Toda et al. Plant Dis. 89:536, 2005. (3) J. A. H. Van Burik et al. Med. Mycol. 36:299, 1998.
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