Phytophthora nicotianae: Fungicide Sensitivity, Fitness, and Molecular Markers

Mefenoxam has been a premier compound for Phytophthora disease control in the nursery industry for 30 years. The primary objectives of this research were to examine whether Phytophthora species have developed resistance to this compound and to investigate fungicide resistance management strategies....

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Main Author: Hu, Jiahuai
Other Authors: Plant Pathology, Physiology, and Weed Science
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
IPM
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26416
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03122007-205922/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-264162020-09-26T05:30:17Z Phytophthora nicotianae: Fungicide Sensitivity, Fitness, and Molecular Markers Hu, Jiahuai Plant Pathology, Physiology, and Weed Science McDowell, John M. Moorman, Gary W. Tyler, Brett M. Hong, Chuanxue Stromberg, Erik L. DNA markers and bulk segregant analysis fungicide resistance genetics competitive ability mycelial adaptation ornamental crops fitness costs segregation fitness IPM EC50 value molecular detection Mefenoxam has been a premier compound for Phytophthora disease control in the nursery industry for 30 years. The primary objectives of this research were to examine whether Phytophthora species have developed resistance to this compound and to investigate fungicide resistance management strategies. Phytophthora nicotianae, a destructive pathogen of numerous herbaceous and some woody ornamental plants, was used as a model system. P. cinnamomi, a major pathogen of a wide range of tree species and shrub plants, was also included for comparison. Twenty-six isolates of P. nicotianae were highly resistant to mefenoxam with a mean EC50 value of 326.5 µg/ml while the remaining 70 were sensitive with an EC50 of <0.01 µg/ml (Label rate: 0.08µg/ml). All resistant isolates were recovered from herbaceous annuals and irrigation water in 3 Virginia nurseries. Resistant isolates were compared with sensitive ones using seedlings of Lupinus â Russell Hybridsâ in the absence of mefenoxam for relative competitive ability. Resistant isolates out-competed sensitive ones within 3 to 6 sporulation cycles. Resistant isolates exhibited greater infection rate and higher sporulation ability than sensitive ones. No mefenoxam resistant isolates were identified in P. cinnamomi. All 65 isolates of P. cinnamomi were sensitive to mefenoxam with an EC50 of < 0.04 ï ­g/ml. Attempts to generate mutants with high resistance to mefenoxam through UV mutagenesis and mycelial adaptation were not successful. However, there were significant reductions in sensitivity to mefenoxam; those slightly resistant mutants carried fitness penalties, which may explain why P. cinnamomi remains sensitive to mefenoxam. The effect of propamocarb hydrochloride on different growth stages of Phytophthora nicotianae was evaluated in search for an alternative fungicide. Propamocarb greatly inhibited sporangium production, zoospore motility, germination and infection. However, it has little inhibition of mycelial growth and infections. Propamocarb can be used as an alternative fungicide to mefenoxam where mefenoxam resistance has become problematic. However, it must be used preventively; i.e. before infections occur. The genetic inheritance of mefenoxam resistance in P. nicotianae was studied using F1 progenies of a cross between resistant and sensitive isolates. The F1 progenies segregated for mefenoxam resistance in ratio of 1R:1S, indicating the mefenoxam resistance is controlled by a single dominant gene. One RAPD marker putatively linked to resistant locus in repulsion phase was obtained by bulked segregant analysis and was converted to the SCAR marker. This marker is capable of differentiating mefenoxam resistant populations from sensitive populations included in this study. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:08:09Z 2014-03-14T20:08:09Z 2007-02-27 2007-03-12 2010-10-08 2007-07-16 Dissertation etd-03122007-205922 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26416 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03122007-205922/ Dissertation_Jiahuai_Hu.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic DNA markers
and bulk segregant analysis
fungicide resistance
genetics
competitive ability
mycelial adaptation
ornamental crops
fitness costs
segregation
fitness
IPM
EC50 value
molecular detection
spellingShingle DNA markers
and bulk segregant analysis
fungicide resistance
genetics
competitive ability
mycelial adaptation
ornamental crops
fitness costs
segregation
fitness
IPM
EC50 value
molecular detection
Hu, Jiahuai
Phytophthora nicotianae: Fungicide Sensitivity, Fitness, and Molecular Markers
description Mefenoxam has been a premier compound for Phytophthora disease control in the nursery industry for 30 years. The primary objectives of this research were to examine whether Phytophthora species have developed resistance to this compound and to investigate fungicide resistance management strategies. Phytophthora nicotianae, a destructive pathogen of numerous herbaceous and some woody ornamental plants, was used as a model system. P. cinnamomi, a major pathogen of a wide range of tree species and shrub plants, was also included for comparison. Twenty-six isolates of P. nicotianae were highly resistant to mefenoxam with a mean EC50 value of 326.5 µg/ml while the remaining 70 were sensitive with an EC50 of <0.01 µg/ml (Label rate: 0.08µg/ml). All resistant isolates were recovered from herbaceous annuals and irrigation water in 3 Virginia nurseries. Resistant isolates were compared with sensitive ones using seedlings of Lupinus â Russell Hybridsâ in the absence of mefenoxam for relative competitive ability. Resistant isolates out-competed sensitive ones within 3 to 6 sporulation cycles. Resistant isolates exhibited greater infection rate and higher sporulation ability than sensitive ones. No mefenoxam resistant isolates were identified in P. cinnamomi. All 65 isolates of P. cinnamomi were sensitive to mefenoxam with an EC50 of < 0.04 ï ­g/ml. Attempts to generate mutants with high resistance to mefenoxam through UV mutagenesis and mycelial adaptation were not successful. However, there were significant reductions in sensitivity to mefenoxam; those slightly resistant mutants carried fitness penalties, which may explain why P. cinnamomi remains sensitive to mefenoxam. The effect of propamocarb hydrochloride on different growth stages of Phytophthora nicotianae was evaluated in search for an alternative fungicide. Propamocarb greatly inhibited sporangium production, zoospore motility, germination and infection. However, it has little inhibition of mycelial growth and infections. Propamocarb can be used as an alternative fungicide to mefenoxam where mefenoxam resistance has become problematic. However, it must be used preventively; i.e. before infections occur. The genetic inheritance of mefenoxam resistance in P. nicotianae was studied using F1 progenies of a cross between resistant and sensitive isolates. The F1 progenies segregated for mefenoxam resistance in ratio of 1R:1S, indicating the mefenoxam resistance is controlled by a single dominant gene. One RAPD marker putatively linked to resistant locus in repulsion phase was obtained by bulked segregant analysis and was converted to the SCAR marker. This marker is capable of differentiating mefenoxam resistant populations from sensitive populations included in this study. === Ph. D.
author2 Plant Pathology, Physiology, and Weed Science
author_facet Plant Pathology, Physiology, and Weed Science
Hu, Jiahuai
author Hu, Jiahuai
author_sort Hu, Jiahuai
title Phytophthora nicotianae: Fungicide Sensitivity, Fitness, and Molecular Markers
title_short Phytophthora nicotianae: Fungicide Sensitivity, Fitness, and Molecular Markers
title_full Phytophthora nicotianae: Fungicide Sensitivity, Fitness, and Molecular Markers
title_fullStr Phytophthora nicotianae: Fungicide Sensitivity, Fitness, and Molecular Markers
title_full_unstemmed Phytophthora nicotianae: Fungicide Sensitivity, Fitness, and Molecular Markers
title_sort phytophthora nicotianae: fungicide sensitivity, fitness, and molecular markers
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26416
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03122007-205922/
work_keys_str_mv AT hujiahuai phytophthoranicotianaefungicidesensitivityfitnessandmolecularmarkers
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