Affiliation:
1. Institute for Cereal Crop Improvement and Department of Plant Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978
2. Northern R&D, Southern Industrial Area, Kiriat Shmona, Israel
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The infection of maize by
Fusarium verticillioides
can result in highly variable disease symptoms ranging from asymptomatic plants to severe rotting and wilting. We produced
F. verticillioides
green fluorescent protein-expressing transgenic isolates and used them to characterize early events in the
F. verticillioides-
maize interaction that may affect later symptom appearance. Plants grown in
F. verticillioides-
infested soil were smaller and chlorotic. The fungus colonized all of the underground parts of a plant but was found primarily in lateral roots and mesocotyl tissue. In some mesocotyl cells, conidia were produced within 14 to 21 days after infection. Intercellular mycelium was detected, but additional cells were not infected until 21 days after planting. At 25 to 30 days after planting, the mesocotyl and main roots were heavily infected, and rotting developed in these tissues. Other tissues, including the adventitious roots and the stem, appeared to be healthy and contained only a small number of hyphae. These results imply that asymptomatic systemic infection is characterized by a mode of fungal development that includes infection of certain tissues, intercellular growth of a limited number of fungal hyphae, and reproduction of the fungus in a few cells without invasion of other cells. Development of visibly rotted tissue is associated with massive production of fungal mycelium and much less organized growth.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
143 articles.
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