First Report of Southern Blight of Epimedium sagittatum Caused by Agroathelia rolfsii in Henan, China

Plant Dis. 2024 Nov 6. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-09-24-1884-PDN. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Epimedium [Epimedium sagittatum (Sieb. et Zucc.) Maxim., E. brevicornu Maxim., E. pubescens Maxim., E. koreanum Nakai] plants are perennial herbs and the dry leaves were used in traditional Chinese medicine with different medicinal effects (Chinese Pharmacopoeia, 2020 edition). In early August 2022 (the high temperature was 33 ℃ and the low temperature was 25 ℃ on average with above 70% relative humidity), large necrotized leaf spots were initially observed in one-year and two-year old E. sagittatum plants in Dengzhou (32°35'26.84" N, 112°11'8.37" E), Henan province, China. White mycelia, yellow and brown sclerotia were observed along the petioles and colonized to the back of leaves and also on soil-petioles interface around the diseased Epimedium plants. White mycelia spread rapidly from the disease plants as a center to neighboring plants and the infected plants eventually wilted. The disease incidence was 16.0% and 28.0% in the surveyed cultivation fields in Dengzhou (Henan) and Danjiangkou (Hubei), respectively, which resulted in above 20% of yield loss. The symptomatic tissues (petioles, n≥10) were cut into 0.5 cm sections with autoclaved scissors and surface sterilized with 75% ethanol for 30 s, followed by 3 min in 1% NaClO, rinsed three times with distilled sterile water, plated on autoclaved filter paper to remove excess moisture in a biological laminar hood, transferred onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates and incubated at 28℃ in incubator in the dark for 3-5 days. Twelve fungal isolates with white radial colony morphology were obtained and purified by hyphal-tip method. The isolates formed radial colonies showing abundant aerial mycelia with a growth rate of 19.25 to 22.25 mm/day (mean = 21.67 ± 0.77 mm; n = 36) and white abundant sclerotia were observed after 5-7 days post inoculation at 28℃. The hyphae of the isolates were hyaline, branched with clamp connections at septa. The isolates formed dark brown sclerotia on PDA plate post 10-14 days incubation. The diameter of mature brown sclerotia ranged from 1.31 to 3.07 mm (mean = 1.91 ± 0.39 mm; n = 40) and 13 to 45 sclerotia (mean = 28; n = 24) were observed on each Petri dish. The isolates were tentatively identified as Agroathelia rolfsii based on morphological characteristics (Yi Y., et al. 2024) and isolate YYHBJ1 was selected as representative isolate for molecular identification and pathogenicity test. The genomic DNA was extracted using CTAB method. For molecular identification, ITS region, translation elongation factor-1alpha (TEF-1α) and nuclear large-subunit ribosomal DNA (nLSU-rDNA) were amplified (White et al. 1990, Wendland and Kothe, 1997). The sequences 684-bp ITS (OR428367), 534-bp TEF1α (OR485567), and 965-bp nLSU-rDNA (OR426612) of isolate YYHBJ1 were deposited in GenBank. Sequence analysis revealed that ITS, TEF1α and nLSU-rDNA sequences of YYHBJ001 showed 100%, 99.63%, and 100% identity to ITS (MN380242 and JF819727), EF1α (MN262527) and nLSU-rDNA (MT225781 and AY635773) sequences of Agroathelia rolfsii (Sacc.) Redhead & Mullineux (Redhead and Mullineux 2023). Pathogenicity tests was confirmed by inoculating 1 year-old E. sagittatum plants grown in pots with sterile soil. PDA plug (5 mm diameter) colonized with 3 brown sclerotia and the fungal culture which was cultivated for 12 days was deposited beside the petiole on the surface of the soil. The control plants were inoculated with PDA plugs without the pathogen. Five plants were used in each treatment. The plants were cultivated in incubator at 28℃ with 80% relative humidity. Fourteen days later, white mycelia growing out from the sclerotia and spread along the petioles to the leave and the infected leaves were yellow. After 21 to 24 days, all inoculated plants displayed symptoms like those observed in field, while no symptoms were observed on the controls. The fungus was re-isolated from the inoculated plants as described above, fulfilling Koch's postulates. The pathogenicity tests were repeated three times. Based on morphological feature and DNA sequences, the pathogen of southern blight on Epimedium plants was identified as A. rolfsii (anamorph S. rolfsii). The pathogen A. rolfsii usually infect kinds of crops and cause southern blight, such as peanuts, chili peppers, green onion and so on (Daunde et al. 2018). To our knowledge, this is the first report of A. rolfsii causing southern blight on E. sagittatum plants in Henan in China.

Keywords: Agroathelia rolfsii; Epimedium sagittatum (Sieb. et Zucc.) Maxim.; Southern Blight.