Evaluation of type i fusarium head blight resistance of wheat using non-deoxynivalenol-producing fungi

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Abstract

A series of experiments was conducted to determine whether type I resistance (resistance to initial infection) to fusarium head blight (FHB) in wheat could be assessed using fungal species/isolates that do not produce deoxynivalenol (DON), a mycotoxin critical to the spread of Fusarium graminearum in the wheat spike. It was shown that, while the non-toxin-producing species Microdochium nivale and M. majus could infect following spray inoculation of wheat spikes, they were unable to spread within the spike following point inoculation. However, although these species might reveal type I resistance, they are not highly pathogenic towards wheat. A nivalenol (NIV)-producing isolate of F. graminearum caused high levels of disease following spray inoculation, but spread only very slowly within the spike and rarely induced bleaching above the point of inoculation. It is proposed that spray inoculation with an appropriate, aggressive, non-DON-producing FHB pathogen may be used to characterize type I resistance to complement point inoculation with a DON-producing isolate to assess type II resistance (resistance to spread within the spike). © 2009 BSPP.

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Gosman, N., Srinivasachary, H., Steed, A., Chandler, E., Thomsett, M., & Nicholson, P. (2010). Evaluation of type i fusarium head blight resistance of wheat using non-deoxynivalenol-producing fungi. Plant Pathology, 59(1), 147–157. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3059.2009.02202.x

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