4.2 Article

Entyloma helianthi: identification and characterization of the causal agent of sunflower white leaf smut

Journal

MYCOLOGIA
Volume 109, Issue 3, Pages 520-528

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/00275514.2017.1362314

Keywords

Consolidated species concept; molecular phylogenetics; Ramularia helianthi; smut fungi; sunflower plant pathogens; Ustilaginomycotina

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Funding

  1. W. Szafer Institute of Botany, Polish Academy of Sciences, Krakow, Poland

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White leaf smut is a minor foliar disease of sunflower (Helianthus annuus) in the United States. The disease occurs primarily in greenhouse-grown sunflowers in California and causes leaf spot, defoliation, and a reduction in yield and crop value. Historically, many Entyloma specimens with similar morphological characters, but infecting diverse plant genera including Helianthus, were called Entyloma polysporum. Recent comparative morphological and molecular work has shown that Entyloma species infect hosts within a single genus or species, suggesting that the sunflower Entyloma species may not be E. polysporum. In 2015, sunflower leaf smut material was collected from ornamental sunflowers in a greenhouse in Santa Barbara County, California. Morphologically, this species differed from E. polysporum in having smaller, more regular-shaped teliospores and prominently developed conidiophores with cylindrical conidia. The rDNA ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 (internal transcribed spacer [ITS]) region of the sunflower leaf smut was phylogenetically distinct from all previously sequenced Entyloma species and found only on H. annuus. This study confirms that the sunflower leaf smut pathogen represents a novel species, Entyloma helianthi. Possible misidentification of the anamorphic stage of Entyloma helianthi as another leaf spot pathogen, Ramularia helianthi, is also discussed.

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