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Articles

Morphology, phylogeny and pathogenicity of Alternaria species, involved in leaf spot disease of sunflower in northern Iran

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Pages 2224-2234 | Received 25 Mar 2013, Accepted 26 Mar 2013, Published online: 20 May 2013
 

Abstract

Leaf spot disease of sunflower is one of the most important foliar diseases on this crop worldwide. Several fungal groups are known to cause leaf spot disease on sunflower. Species of the genus Alternaria are the most common and serious leaf spot causing fungi on this crop. Leaf spot disease is the most destructive foliar diseases on sunflower in northern Iran; however, the identity of the causal agent remains unknown. The present study was aimed to characterise the identity of the causal agent of the disease by means of morphological and molecular data as well as to evaluate the pathogenicity of the responsible species. For this purpose, a total number of 97 fungal isolates were recovered from sunflower leaves with leaf spot disease symptoms from the sunflower fields in northwestern zone of Iran. All of the isolates were identified as Alternaria alternata based on cultural and morphological characteristics. A subset of isolates was subjected to phylogenetic analysis using sequence data from ITS-rDNA region, gpd and rpb2 genes. Sequence data from ITS-rDNA and gpd did not discriminate A. alternata from the other small-spored Alternaria species. A phylogeny inferred using sequence data from rpb2 gene clustered our isolates in several sub-clades within a single monophyletic clade. Sequence data for the type strain of the other small-spored Alternaria species has to be included in phylogenetic analysis, in order to make sure, whether the observed variations in rpb2 gene sequences are an indication for the population variation in sunflower isolates of A. alternata or define species boundaries among the small-spored Alternaria species. The results of pathogenicity assay on sunflower plants (cultivar Euroflor) under greenhouse condition revealed that A. alternata is pathogenic on sunflower.

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