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Maize Seedling Blight Induced by <i>Fusarium verticillioides</i>: Accumulation of Fumonisin B<sub>1</sub> in Leaves without Colonization of the Leaves
33
Citations
31
References
2014
Year
BiologyFusarium VerticillioidesEngineeringFb₁ AccumulationMedicineMycotoxin FormationPathogenesisCrop ProtectionAgricultural EconomicsPlant ProtectionPlant PathologyMicrobiologyHost ResistanceFb₁ MobilityPlant-pathogen InteractionFungal PathogenPlant Health
Fusarium verticillioides produces fumonisin mycotoxins during the colonization of maize, and fumonisin B₁ (FB₁) production is necessary for manifestation of maize seedling blight disease. The objective of this study was to address FB₁ mobility and accumulation in seedlings to determine if proximal infection by F. verticillioides is necessary for FB₁ accumulation. Taking advantage of an aconidial mutant known to have limited capability for seedling infection, tissue and soil samples were analyzed to compare wild-type F. verticillioides against the mutant. Inoculation with either strain caused accumulation of FB₁ in the first and second leaves, but the mutants were unable to colonize aerial tissues. FB₁, FB₂, and FB₃ were detected in the soil and seedling roots, but only FB₁ was detected in the leaves of any treatment. These data suggest root infection by F. verticillioides is necessary for accumulation of FB₁ in leaves, but the mechanism for accumulation does not require colonization of the leaf.
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