Fusarium oxysporum as an Opportunistic Fungal Pathogen on Zinnia hybrida Plants Grown on board the International Space Station
A plant production system called Veggie was launched to the International Space Station (ISS) in 2014. In late 2015, during the growth of cv. 'Profusion' in the Veggie hardware, plants developed chlorosis, leaf curling, fungal growth that damaged leaves and stems, and eventually necrosis....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Astrobiology 2021-09, Vol.21 (9), p.1029-1048 |
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Zusammenfassung: | A plant production system called Veggie was launched to the International Space Station (ISS) in 2014. In late 2015, during the growth of
cv. 'Profusion' in the Veggie hardware, plants developed chlorosis, leaf curling, fungal growth that damaged leaves and stems, and eventually necrosis. The development of symptoms was correlated to reduced air flow leading to a significant buildup of water enveloping the leaves and stems in microgravity. Symptomatic tissues were returned to Earth on 18 May 2016 and were immediately processed to determine the primary causal agent of the disease. The presumptive pathogen was identified as
by morphological features of microconidia and conidiophores on symptomatic tissues; that is, by epifluorescent microscopy (EFM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), metabolic microarrays, and ITS sequencing. Both EFM and SEM imaging of infected tissues showed that germinating conidia were capable of stomatal penetration and thus acted as the primary method for infecting host tissues. A series of ground-based pathogenicity assays were conducted with healthy
plants that were exposed to reduced-airflow and high-water stress (
encased in sealed bags) or were kept in an unstressed configuration. Koch's postulates were successfully completed with
plants in the lab, but symptoms only matched ISS-flown symptomatic tissues when the plants were stressed with high-water exposure. Unstressed plants grown under similar lab conditions failed to develop the symptoms observed with plants on board the ISS. The overall results of the pathogenicity tests imply that
acted as an opportunistic pathogen on severely high-water stressed plants. The source of the opportunistic pathogen is not known, but virulent strains of
were not recovered from unused materials in the Veggie plant pillow growth units assayed after the flight. |
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ISSN: | 1531-1074 1557-8070 |
DOI: | 10.1089/ast.2020.2399 |