Anthracnose disease was detected from dragon fruit (Hylocereus undatus) at a market of Yuanjiang County, Yunnan Province, China. The results of pathogenicity test, morphology studies and sequence analyses based on ITS and β‐tubulin loci indicated that the disease was caused by Colletotrichum truncatum. The pathogen produced elliptic, yellow spots with chlorotic halos on the surface of the fruit, and the lesion become depressed gradually. Grey to black acervuli appeared on the lesion surface in concentric circles later. This is the first report of dragon fruit anthracnose caused by this pathogen in China.
Iron overload is an independent risk factor for disuse osteoporosis. Hibernating animals are natural models of anti-disuse osteoporosis; however, whether iron metabolism is involved in bone adaptation and maintenance during hibernation is unclear. To investigate this question, Daurian ground squirrels (Spermophilus dauricus) (n = 5–6/group) were used to study changes in bone iron metabolism and its possible role in anti-disuse osteoporosis during hibernation. Iron content in the femur and liver first decreased in the torpor group (vs. summer group, −66.8% and −25.8%, respectively), then recovered in the post-hibernation group, suggesting remarkable plasticity of bone iron content. The expression of ferritin in the femur and hepcidin in the liver also initially decreased in the torpor group (vs. summer group, −28.5% and −38.8%, respectively), then increased in the inter-bout arousal (vs. torpor group, 126.2% and 58.4%, respectively) and post-hibernation groups (vs. torpor group, 153.1% and 27.1%, respectively). In conclusion, bone iron metabolism in hibernating Daurian ground squirrels showed remarkable plasticity, which may be a potential mechanism to avoid disuse bone loss during extended periods of inactivity. However, the specific location of iron during low-iron hibernation and the source of iron in post-hibernation recovery need to be further explored.
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