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1.
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Infection of American and European chestnuts with the chestnut blight fungus Cryphonectria parasitica results in the formation of cankers, lesions caused by the growth of mycelia within bark tissue of the host plant. Infection of the fungus with Cryphonectria hypovirus 1 (CHV‐1) results in conversion of the mycelial phenotype from virulent to hypovirulent, thus allowing production of callus around cankers as a reaction by infected trees, rendering active into inactive cankers. In this study, we sampled one USA and six European chestnut stands and assessed frequency of hypovirulent C. parasitica and diversity of vegetative compatibility (vc) types present in calluses and randomly sampled cankers. Callused cankers on C. dentata at West Salem in the USA yielded significantly more hypovirulent C. parasitica isolates compared with four sampled populations on C. sativa, while all six sampled European populations did not show any statistically significant differences among themselves. We observed no correlation between hypovirulence frequencies in randomly sampled cankers and calluses, as well as no correlation of C. parasitica vc type diversity in calluses and residential populations of the fungus. Furthermore, even though we have observed calluses with more than one vc type, they do not occur regularly. Even when present in C. parasitica populations with high vc type diversity, no more than three different vc types were observed in a single callus.  相似文献   

3.
American chestnut trees, grafted in 1980 from large survivors, were inoculated in 1982 and 1983 with four white (European) hypovirulent strains of Cryphonectria parasitica, infected with C. hypovirus 1 (CHV1); this hypovirus has been shown to be capable of moving rapidly within the mycelium of a vegetative compatibility (vc) type of C. parasitica in blight cankers. Using a 49‐cell lattice plot, 17.8×17.8 cm, the spatial patterns and frequencies of white and pigmented isolates and white and pigmented vc types were investigated within superficial cankers on the grafts located outside the hypovirulent‐strain‐inoculated zone. Four of six cankers assayed contained white isolates, and three of the four had random spatial patterns of white isolates, based on join‐count statistics. Vc tests, using pigmented isolates and pigmented single‐spore colonies of white isolates, indicated that the majority of white and pigmented isolates recovered from each of two cankers assayed were in one vc type. White and pigmented lattice‐plot cells of the same vc type were frequently in contact with each other, indicating incomplete movement of CHV1 within a vc type. Nine and 10 vc types were found in the two cankers; it is hypothesized that small, white vc type areas in each canker may be a source of CHV1 transmission to the major vc types. Based on join‐count statistics, the spatial pattern of the single, major vc type in one canker was non‐random (aggregated), whereas the other canker had a random major vc type pattern. White and pigmented in vitro variants (sectors) of C. parasitica, that resemble white and pigmented in vivo variants in spatial contact and vc compatibility, were intermediate hypovirulent and virulent on forest American chestnuts, and dsRNA positive and negative, respectively. Incomplete movement of CHV1 within a vc type could be a major cause of the prevalence of pigmented isolates in superficial cankers on chestnut trees.  相似文献   

4.
Cryphonectria parasitica (Murrill.) Barr is a necrotrophic fungus that affects European chestnut populations. In Catalonia (NE Spain), this fungus is widely spread affecting chestnut stands. In addition to vegetative compatibility (VC) types of the fungus, knowledge of the Cryphonectria hypovirus (CHV) occurrence is important to implement a biocontrol programme. We confirmed the presence of hypoviruses in several chestnut subpopulations of Catalonia, and we determined the VC types of CHV‐infected isolates. We also studied the nucleotide sequences of these hypoviruses from a variable region located in the hypovirus ORF‐A. Our results show a low occurrence of hypoviruses throughout C. parasitica populations in Catalonia, except for a few localized stands. From 312 sampled cankers, we obtained 179 white, pale orange or rickety isolates. In 35 of them, we detected CHV‐1. Infected isolates belonged to 5 of the 7 sampled subpopulations. We found 12 CHV‐1 haplotypes, based on the nucleotide sequence analysis. Most of the hypoviruses have the same nucleotide sequence or show high homology at nucleotide level with isolates previously included in CHV‐1 subtype‐I. However, we found that 3 haplotypes share at least 97% of their ORF‐A nucleotide sequence with CHV‐1 subtype‐E. Phylogenetic analysis grouped these 3 isolates in a different cluster than the other hypoviruses. These results suggest that multiple introductions of CHV‐1 have occurred recently in Catalonia. Dominant VC types of hypovirus‐infected isolates are EU‐1, EU‐2 and EU‐5, which are similar to those previously reported in this region.  相似文献   

5.
Three indigenous field strains of the chestnut blight fungus, Cryphonectria parasitica collected in 1996 from a test site in the Meshomasic State Forest, Connecticut, USA, were engineered to contain a chromosomally integrated full‐length infectious cDNA copy of the severe, virulence‐attenuating hypovirus CHV1‐EP713. These transgenic hypovirulent strains were introduced into the test site after it had been clear‐cut, as sprayed conidia in multiple applications over 4 years, beginning in 1997. Evidence was obtained for cytoplasmic transmission of cDNA‐derived hypovirus RNA and for recovery of transgenic strains from canker tissue of the spray‐treated trees. However, there was no indication of spread of transgenic strains or cDNA‐derived viral RNA to the control plot or outside the treatment plot. A single transgenic C. parasitica isolate was identified from a total of 156 isolates recovered from 1330 insects representing five insect orders. Only 2.6% of the 1082 C. parasitica bark isolates recovered during the course of this study were vegetatively compatible with the untransformed input strains. Transgenic ascospore progeny were produced by 40% of the perithecia collected in 1999 and by only 7.3% of the perithecia collected in 2000. A concurrent field release study performed in the Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia in 1998 and 1999 with transgenic hypovirulent strains constructed with the same CHV1‐EP713 cDNA‐containing plasmid identified seasonal application dates and delivery methods that resulted in very high levels of transgenic ascospore production. Results of the combined field release studies are discussed in terms of requirements for improved formulations and delivery methods and the importance of balancing ecological fitness and virulence attenuation.  相似文献   

6.
Cryphonectria parasitica was discovered in the sweet chestnut forests of south‐western Germany in 1992. Two main areas affected by chestnut blight were discerned, one to the east and one to the west of the Rhine valley. The occurrence of the fungal pathogen with respect to vegetative compatibility (vc) type and hypovirulence was analysed by sampling chestnut blight cankers between 1992 and 2010. Among 368 C. parasitica isolates sampled in south‐western Germany, 9 different vc types were found. East of the Rhine valley, EU‐2 is the most widespread vc type. In addition, two isolated forest areas infected with C. parasitica of the vc types EU‐14 and EU‐28 were detected. West of the Rhine valley, C. parasitica of the vc type EU‐65 was repeatedly isolated from an infection focus, the spread of which was successfully suppressed for several years by sanitation measures. Since 2003, additional outbreaks of C. parasitica belonging to the vc types EU‐2 and EU‐5 were detected in the vicinity. Several other vc types (EU‐1, EU‐12, EU‐33 and one vc type incompatible with any of the 74 European testers) were identified on isolated trees mainly in urban areas across the study area and were subsequently eradicated. The spatial and temporal distribution of the different vc types indicates at least nine different introductory events of C. parasitica into south‐western Germany. Natural hypovirulence was only found in the infection area in Baden‐Württemberg. A total of four hypovirulent isolates of the vc type EU‐2 were obtained, one in 1992 and three in recent years. The four hypoviruses were genetically closely related and belonged to the Spanish/German subtype of Cryphonectria hypovirus 1. As the different vc types in south‐western Germany occur mostly in spatially separated, single stands, the introduction of hypovirulence as biological control is expected to be effective.  相似文献   

7.
Chestnut blight caused by Cryphonectria parasitica has been one of the major reasons for the decline of chestnut cultivation in Greece over the last 50 years. A previous detailed study of the vc types of the fungus has revealed only four vc types in the entire country, those of EU‐1, EU‐2 and EU‐10 with the dominant being EU‐12 counting for 88% of the isolates. As the loss in orchard trees reached in some chestnut producing prefectures over 35% of the trees, the decision was taken to apply biological control on a nationwide scale. The project was implemented in 17 prefectures during the period 2007–2009. Hypovirulent (hv) strains of Cparasitica which were infected by the CHV‐1 subtype I (Italian subtype) viruses which occur naturally in Greece were used. The necessary hypovirulent inoculum was prepared at the Forest Research Institute during the period 2007–2009 on a large scale, however, with laboratory care. Three million inoculations were made around accessible developing cankers over three consecutive years by trained personnel. An extensive evaluation conducted in 2011 in the 12 of the 17 treated prefectures, where no natural hypovirulence had been found before, demonstrated not only the successful establishment of hypovirulence but also profound dissemination and healing of non‐inoculated cankers. The extent of dissemination varied significantly among sampling plots and among prefectures. The conclusion is drawn that CHV‐1 subtype I has successfully established and spread into chestnut orchards and coppice forests resulting in a gradual decline of chestnut blight.  相似文献   

8.
We surveyed chestnut stands at 18 sites in 11 locations in Bulgaria in 2005 and 2007 for the presence of chestnut blight. We found chestnut blight in seven locations (Belogradchik, Berkovitsa, Brezhani, Barziya, Govezhda, Petrich and Petrovo) but not in four others (Tsaparevo, Kresna, Dupnica and Botevgrad). We successfully isolated Cryphonectria parasitica from cankers on 606 trees with symptoms of chestnut blight and assayed them for vegetative compatibility (vc) types and mating type. Three vc types were identified among the 606 isolates; all three were among the European vc types with known vegetative incompatibility (vic) genotypes. Vc type EU‐12 was the most common, representing 80% of the isolates, and was found at all locations with blight, with the exception of Belogradchik in north‐west Bulgaria, where all isolates were vc type EU‐2. Only one population (Barziya) had more than one vc type, with a combination of EU‐12 and EU‐10 in almost equal frequencies. Similarly, the diversity of mating types was very low. All but three of 536 isolates assayed were in mating‐type MAT‐1; MAT‐2 was only found in one population in the north‐west (Berkovitsa). We inspected 671 bark samples from chestnut blight cankers with stromata of C. parasitica and found perithecia in only 33, of which 28 were from Berkovitsa where MAT‐2 was present. We did not detect hypoviruses in any of the 270 isolates screened using the standard double‐stranded RNA extraction protocol. Similar to results from previous studies in south‐eastern Europe, the diversity of vc types and mating type of C. parasitica in Bulgaria is low, and reproduction of the fungus is mainly asexual. Unfortunately, naturally occurring hypovirulence was not detected. Nevertheless, we observed a small number of superficial cankers typical of those caused by C. parasitica isolates infected with a hypovirus.  相似文献   

9.
Chestnut blight destroyed the native chestnut forests in North America and also severely affected the European chestnut trees after its introduction in the 20th century. The ascomycete fungus Cryphonectria parasitica is responsible for this serious disease and causes lethal bark cankers on susceptible chestnut trees. In Europe, however, an infection of C. parasitica with Cryphonectria hypovirus 1 (CHV‐1) causes hypovirulence in C. parasitica and reduces the severity of the disease. Hypovirulence biologically controls chestnut blight in many regions to date. In this study, our goal was to determine morphological canker characteristics that are indicative of virus presence or absence in C. parasitica. We investigated 677 chestnut blight cankers from seven different geographic locations across Europe. For each canker, we assessed canker length, stem encircling, canker depth, presence of sporulation, canker activity and virus infection. We statistically analysed the informative value of these morphological characteristics for the presence or absence of CHV‐1. However, we did not find reliable indicators. Our logistic regression analysis revealed that virus infection of C. parasitica is not clearly related to canker morphology. This implies that fungal isolations from chestnut blight cankers and assessments in the laboratory are required to determine infection with CHV‐1 unequivocally.  相似文献   

10.
In 1982 and 1983, natural blight cankers, located in a zone extending from the ground to 183 cm on the main stem of grafted American chestnut trees, were inoculated with a mixture of dsRNA-containing, white (European) and pigmented hypovirulent strains of Cryphonectria parasitica (H-inoculated zone). In 1996, white isolates (34% of 156 C. parasitica isolates) were recovered from superficial cankers throughout the grafts and as far as 564 cm from the H-inoculated zone. Lloyd's index of patchiness value (1.36) indicated that white isolates were slightly aggregated in cankers on the grafts. Forty-five percent of 95 C. parasitica isolates, recovered 5–50 months after inoculating the grafts with pigmented virulent strain WK, were white and some converted strain WK to the white phenotype in vitro. All cankers and bark cores yielding only pigmented isolates, vegetatively compatible with virulent strain WK, had superficial necrosis 5 and 11 months after inoculation with strain WK. All white isolates of C. parasitica assayed contained a 12.7 kbp dsRNA in high concentrations, and were hypovirulent in pathogenicity trials. Twenty-eight vegetative compatibility groups were identified among 65 pigmented graft area isolates; none of 48 pigmented isolates contained dsRNA. In addition to host resistance factors, spread of white strains may be responsible for the unusually high level of blight control on the grafts.  相似文献   

11.
The frequencies and spatial patterns of white and pigmented strains of Cryphonectria parasitica were investigated within cankers in a zone on grafted American chestnut trees inoculated with white (European) and pigmented hypovirulent strains (H-inoculated zone) 15–16 years earlier. Six 7 × 7 lattice plots (each 17.8 × 17.8 cm) were established on cankers in the H-inoculated zone of the grafts. Assays of 49 bark cores per lattice indicated that 35.3% of 306 C. parasitica isolates recovered from the six lattice plots were white. The white isolates had a random pattern, potentially favorable to biocontrol, within the highly superficial cankers, based on join-count statistics of the six lattice plots. Pigmented isolates dominated the C. parasitica population, and virulence trials on American chestnut sprouts indicated 36% of the pigmented isolates from the H-inoculated zone were hypovirulent and 27% were virulent. Most (84.3%) pigmented isolates in a bark core could not be converted to the white phenotype in vitro by white isolates in the same bark core. Five of six lattice plots had a random pattern of pigmented isolates, based on join-count statistics. The sixth lattice plot was composed of an aggregate of 36 lattice cells (area = 232 cm2) containing 12 pigmented vegetative compatability (vc) groups of C. parasitica, which were interwoven in the lattice as a mosaic of thread-like forms, blocks, or ‘islands’ 32 cm2 or less in area for each vc group. Hypotheses are advanced to explain why virulent pigmented strains persist in blight-controlled cankers of the H-inoculated zone but do not kill the vascular cambium.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The occurrence of chestnut blight (Cryphonectria parasitica) on oaks in mixed chestnut‐oak forests was studied in 2003–2008 in Slovakia. Infections on living Quercus trees were found at four of seven localities. The disease incidence on oaks ranged from 1.3% to 15.8%. The symptoms on infected oaks were similar to those on chestnut, but less conspicuous. Cankers of C. parasitica were found only on Quercus robur and Q. petraea. A total of 22 isolates of C. parasitica, all virulent, were isolated. Each site yielded only a single vc type (EU12 or EU13). Field inoculation experiments on chestnuts with seven strains of C. parasitica from oaks and an isolate from Castanea sativa showed no differences in virulence. On Quercus robur stems, the cankered area was significantly smaller than on C. sativa and the cankers developed very slowly.  相似文献   

14.
Although Cryphonectria hypoviruses have been relatively successful as biological control agents of chestnut blight in Europe, their success in North America has been limited. Experimental releases of hypoviruses were made in 1978–82 at two sites in West Virginia forests with high densities of regenerating chestnut trees. Cryphonectria hypovirus 1 (CHV‐1) from Europe, as well as American isolates of Cryphonectria parasitica containing CHV‐3, were used for these releases. Although most trees died during the 5‐year release period, it was not known if the hypoviruses persisted in the C. parasitica population at the two sites. When the experimental plots were revisited in 1994, few chestnut trees were found. The exception was one plot containing coppice sprouts that had grown from the root collars of the original trees. The authors intensively sampled C. parasitica from experimental plots and screened recovered isolates for double‐stranded RNA (dsRNA). None of the isolates contained CHV‐1; only six isolates contained CHV‐3, all from the plots with the coppice sprouts. CHV‐4, which occurs naturally in West Virginia forests and in two released isolates, hybridized to dsRNA from the isolates containing CHV‐3, indicating mixed infections. CHV‐4 also hybridized to dsRNA from other isolates sampled inside and outside the treated plots. In contrast to CHV‐1 and CHV‐3, however, CHV‐4 has little effect on the growth or phenotype of C. parasitica. The limited persistence of CHV‐1 and CHV‐3 may have resulted when the C. parasitica population was reduced in size due to the failure of chestnut trees to resprout because of competition from other hardwood species.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Healing cankers were obtained in some artificial inoculation tests with combination of four hypovirulent strains of Cryphonectria parasitica which sporulated on the cankers.  相似文献   

17.
Isolates of the chestnut blight fungus Cryphonectria parasitica were obtained from 44 localities in four provinces in Western Spain and characterized for vegetative compatibility (vc) types, mating types and the presence of Cryphonectria hypovirus 1 (CHV1). Among the 1232 isolates recovered from chestnut blight cankers, 11 vc types were identified: five known vc types included in EU1 to EU74 (EU1, EU11, EU12, EU28 and EU66) and six unknown vc types (CL4, CL5 CL6, CL8, CL9 and CL10). The number of vc types found per province varied between two and seven. The vc type EU11 was present in all provinces and accounted for 48.9% of all isolates. EU1 was detected in three provinces and accounted for 39.1% of the isolates. The vc types EU12, EU66, CL5 and CL6 were present in one or two provinces and comprised between 2.4% and 3% of the isolates. The other vc types were represented by only one or very few isolates. The mating type MAT‐1 was largely dominant in the provinces Leon and Avila, while both mating types MAT‐1 and MAT‐2 were found in Salamanca and Zamora. Fourteen hypovirus‐infected C. parasitica isolates were found, nine were in vc type EU1 and five in EU11, and they were detected only in the province León. All isolates analysed contained the French hypovirus subtype CHV1‐F1.  相似文献   

18.
A mixture of hypovirulent strains of Cryphonectria parasitica, including four white (European) strains infected with Cryphonectria hypovirus1 (CHV1), was used in 1982 and 1983 to inoculate natural blight cankers located within a zone ranging from the ground to 183 cm on grafted American chestnut trees. These four white strains belonged to three vegetative compatibility (vc) types. Using pigmented, single‐spore colonies from white isolates, 48 vc types were identified among 110 white isolates recovered in 1996, 1998, and 1999 from cankers located outside the inoculated zone. Twenty‐five of the 48 white vc types consisted of two or more isolates. The 25 major white vc types were vegetatively incompatible with all four of the original white hypovirulent strains, providing evidence for spread of CHV1 but not for spread of the original inoculated strains. Forty‐five vc types represent the minimum number of `new' vc types into which CHV1 had spread. The ratio of white vc types to white isolates tested (S/N) and Shannon diversity index were 0.436 and 3.64, respectively. The spatial pattern of white vc types on the grafts was found to be non‐random (p=0.019). White single‐spore colonies of white isolates were placed into four cultural morphology (CM) groups. The two largest groups contained 37 (CM group 3) and 33 (CM group 1) isolates. Single‐spore colonies from the original, white inoculated strain, Ep 49, were classified into CM groups 3 and 1, and colonies of Ep 51 W were classified into CM group 1.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of crude extracts (CEs) of virulent (V‐E4) and hypovirulent (H‐E13) Cryphonectria parasitica strains on growth and physiological activities of chestnut calli was investigated on cell cultures obtained from either a susceptible Castanea sativa or a resistant Castanea mollissima chestnut species. The V‐E4 CEs significantly reduced calli fresh weight in both species when used at 50 and 500 μg g–1 and, in general, showed an inhibitory effect on either O2 uptake and H+‐ATPase activity. Only the highest (500 μg g–1) concentration of H‐E13 CEs had a detrimental effect on callus growth, whereas the lowest one (5 μg g–1) induced a slight, but significant early increase in callus fresh weight of both genotypes. The O2 uptake and H+‐ATPase activity were enhanced by the presence of H‐E13 CEs. The decrease of callus growth and physiological activities, caused by V‐E4 CEs, was attributed to toxic compounds produced by the C. parasitica virulent strain, whereas the stimulatory effects of H‐E13 CEs on the overall callus metabolism seemed to be due either to the lack or very reduced amount of phytotoxic compounds and to growth‐regulating substances produced only by the hypovirulent strain of the fungus.  相似文献   

20.
Seasonal variation in the development of chestnut blight, caused by Cryphonectria parasitica, was investigated by inoculating in situ chestnut trees and in vitro excised chestnut segments, at either monthly or 3‐monthly intervals throughout 30 months. Inoculations were made with conidia and mycelium of a virulent isolate and with mycelium of a hypovirulent isolate. Conidial inoculations of living sprouts or excised segments between May and July resulted in the greatest incidence of infection whereas inoculations in autumn and winter, in vitro as well as in situ, did not reveal any visible disease. However, from these symptomless inoculated stems, C. parasitica was isolated 3 months after inoculation. Inoculations with the mycelium of the virulent isolate always resulted in lesions, except in January 1999, and the greatest rate of lesion development occurred for inoculations made in the spring and summer. There was a significant seasonal effect on lesion development. Lesions caused by the hypovirulent isolate, smaller than those caused by the virulent isolate, followed a similar seasonal pattern. The same seasonal variations were observed for inoculations in vitro of excised segments. Relative water content (RWC) of chestnut bark significantly varied with bark sampling date. The rate of lesion development in sprouts significantly correlated with average minimum (ATn) and maximum (ATx) temperatures and the sum of rainfall during inoculation period, with the rate of lesion development measured in excised segments 10 days after inoculation (R10d) and with RWC measured on the day of inoculation. In multiple regression models, variables ATx and R10d best explained variation in lesion development.  相似文献   

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