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Natural variation of ascospore and conidial germination by Fusarium verticillioides and other Fusarium species

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MYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH
卷 110, 期 -, 页码 211-219

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.mycres.2005.09.004

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Ascomycota; conidial fungi; fumonisin; Gibberella moniliformis; plant pathology

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Fusarium verticillioides and other Fusarium species were examined for their spore germination phenotypes. In general, germinating spores of F. verticillioides formed germ tubes that immediately penetrated into agar. Such invasive germination was the predominant growth phenotype among 22 examined field isolates of F. verticillioides from a broad range hosts and locations. However, two of the field isolates were unique in that they formed conidial germ tubes and hyphae that grew along the surface of agar before penetration eventually occurred. Conidia of 22 other Fusariurn species were assessed for their germination phenotypes, and only some strains of F. annulatum, F.fujilzuroi, F. globosum, F. nygamai, and F. pseudoonthophilum had the surface germination phenotype (21% of the strains assessed). Sexual crosses and segregation analyses involving one of the F. verticillioides surface germination strains, NRRL 25059, indicated a single locus, designated SIG1 (surface vs. invasive germination), controlled the germ tube growth phenotypes exhibited by both conidia and ascospores. Perfect correlation was observed between an ascospore germination phenotype and the germination phenotype of the conidia produced from the resulting ascospore-derived colony. Recombination data suggested SIG1 was linked (similar to 7 % recombination frequency) to FPH1, a recently described locus necessary for enteroblastic conidiogenesis. Corn seedling blight assays indicated surface germinating strains of F. verticillioides were less virulent than invasively germinating strains. Assays also indicated pathogenicity segregated independently of the FPH1 locus. Invasive germination is proposed as the dominant form of spore germination among Fusarium species. Furthermore, conidia were not necessary for corn seedling disease development, but invasive germination may have enhanced the virulence of conidiating strains. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The British Mycological Society.

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