The pear black necrotic leaf spot disease virus transmitted by Talaromyces flavus displays pathogenicity similar to Apple stem grooving virus strains

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Abstract

The pathogenicity to pear trees and other experimental hosts of the Apple stem grooving virus Korean isolate (ASGV-K) carried by a fungal vector, Talaromyces flavus was examined. ASGV-harboring T. flavus induced mild symptoms on virus-free pears. Symptom severity was intermediate between pears showing typical PBNLS and virus-free pears. Ten cultivars of Phaseolus vulgaris showed 35%-90% infectivity by direct infiltration into leaves and roots by ASGV-harboring T. flavus. Application of fungal cultures to soils showed 0%-70% infectivity depending on the P. vulgaris cultivar. Sap extracted from ASGV-infected Chenopodium quinoa induced similar symptoms on P. vulgaris at 25 days after inoculation. Similar symptoms were also detected on P. vulgaris which were inoculated with ASGV-harboring T. flavus. When healthy P. vulgaris leaves were challenged with sap extracted from P. vulgaris leaves infected with ASGV-harboring T. flavus, typical symptoms were observed. These data suggest that T. flavus mediates the transfer of ASGV to host plants. © The Korean Society of Plant Pathology.

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APA

Shim, H. K., Hwang, K. H., Shim, C. K., Son, S. W., Kim, D., Choi, Y. M., … Lee, S. C. (2006). The pear black necrotic leaf spot disease virus transmitted by Talaromyces flavus displays pathogenicity similar to Apple stem grooving virus strains. Plant Pathology Journal, 22(3), 255–259. https://doi.org/10.5423/PPJ.2006.22.3.255

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