Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS) : pathogen identification, characterization and screening for disease resistance

Daphne is a widely dispersed genus with large variation in morphology, native habitats ,and use. Unfortunately, broader acceptance of Daphne in the ornamental trade has been limited due to Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS), a disease that kills the plant without warning. The results of this resear...

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Main Author: Noshad, David
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1705
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-17052018-01-05T17:22:56Z Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS) : pathogen identification, characterization and screening for disease resistance Noshad, David Daphne DSDS Thielaviopsis basicola Daphne is a widely dispersed genus with large variation in morphology, native habitats ,and use. Unfortunately, broader acceptance of Daphne in the ornamental trade has been limited due to Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS), a disease that kills the plant without warning. The results of this research identified Thielaviopsis basicola (Berk. et Br.) Ferr. as the causal agent for this disease. Pure cultures of the pathogen were developed and used in a germplasm screen. To evaluate Daphne germplasm in vitro, species-specific protocols were developed that alleviated two common problems in Daphne micropropagation, browning and hyperhydricity. Optimizing the concentrations of both PGRs and charcoal was able to control these problems. Selected species were evaluated for resistance against Thielavipsis basicola in both, in vivo and in vitro, conditions. The results of both methods displayed a strong correlation and indicated significant differences among the taxa. However, there were differences in disease progression rates. Typically, the in vitro challenge produced a comparable level of disease as the in vivo challenge but in two to three weeks less time. Across both screening methods, the most resistant species evaluated were D. tangutica and D. retusa, while D. cneroum was the most susceptible. Based on ITS sequences, phylogenetic relationships among selected Daphne species were established and associated with their resistance against T basicola. The phylogeny indicated that Daphne is possibly a monophyletic group. However, placement of D. genkwa remained problematic. The analysis of ITS sequences data resulted in a parsimony consensus tree with two well-supported major clades and one Glade with less support. In general, the evolutionary tree for resistance, inferred from the phylogenetic data and the results of the screening project, indicate that resistance is a derived character and that plants recently evolved this ability. Land and Food Systems, Faculty of Graduate 2008-09-05T21:06:27Z 2008-09-05T21:06:27Z 2007 2008-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1705 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 5606498 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Daphne
DSDS
Thielaviopsis basicola
spellingShingle Daphne
DSDS
Thielaviopsis basicola
Noshad, David
Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS) : pathogen identification, characterization and screening for disease resistance
description Daphne is a widely dispersed genus with large variation in morphology, native habitats ,and use. Unfortunately, broader acceptance of Daphne in the ornamental trade has been limited due to Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS), a disease that kills the plant without warning. The results of this research identified Thielaviopsis basicola (Berk. et Br.) Ferr. as the causal agent for this disease. Pure cultures of the pathogen were developed and used in a germplasm screen. To evaluate Daphne germplasm in vitro, species-specific protocols were developed that alleviated two common problems in Daphne micropropagation, browning and hyperhydricity. Optimizing the concentrations of both PGRs and charcoal was able to control these problems. Selected species were evaluated for resistance against Thielavipsis basicola in both, in vivo and in vitro, conditions. The results of both methods displayed a strong correlation and indicated significant differences among the taxa. However, there were differences in disease progression rates. Typically, the in vitro challenge produced a comparable level of disease as the in vivo challenge but in two to three weeks less time. Across both screening methods, the most resistant species evaluated were D. tangutica and D. retusa, while D. cneroum was the most susceptible. Based on ITS sequences, phylogenetic relationships among selected Daphne species were established and associated with their resistance against T basicola. The phylogeny indicated that Daphne is possibly a monophyletic group. However, placement of D. genkwa remained problematic. The analysis of ITS sequences data resulted in a parsimony consensus tree with two well-supported major clades and one Glade with less support. In general, the evolutionary tree for resistance, inferred from the phylogenetic data and the results of the screening project, indicate that resistance is a derived character and that plants recently evolved this ability. === Land and Food Systems, Faculty of === Graduate
author Noshad, David
author_facet Noshad, David
author_sort Noshad, David
title Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS) : pathogen identification, characterization and screening for disease resistance
title_short Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS) : pathogen identification, characterization and screening for disease resistance
title_full Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS) : pathogen identification, characterization and screening for disease resistance
title_fullStr Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS) : pathogen identification, characterization and screening for disease resistance
title_full_unstemmed Daphne Sudden Death Syndrome (DSDS) : pathogen identification, characterization and screening for disease resistance
title_sort daphne sudden death syndrome (dsds) : pathogen identification, characterization and screening for disease resistance
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1705
work_keys_str_mv AT noshaddavid daphnesuddendeathsyndromedsdspathogenidentificationcharacterizationandscreeningfordiseaseresistance
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