First report of bacterial panicle blight (BPB) in Rice caused by Burkholderia gladioli in Bangladesh

Bacterial panicle blight (BPB) has become one of the most destructive diseases of rice worldwide and and are two major pathogens causing BPB (1). This disease causes several types of damage, most importantly grain spotting, rot, and panicle blight, which can result in yield losses of 75% or more (1,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant disease 2023-05, Vol.107 (9), p.2837
Hauptverfasser: Islam, Md Rashidul, Jannat, Rowzatun, Protic, Ismam Ahmed, Happy, Mst Nusrat Arobi, Samin, Samia Islam, Mita, Mamuna Mahjabin, Bashar, Samrin, Masud, Md Mostafa, Islam, Huzzatul, Uddin, Md Nasir, Akter, Mst Arjina, Alam, Md Zahangir
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bacterial panicle blight (BPB) has become one of the most destructive diseases of rice worldwide and and are two major pathogens causing BPB (1). This disease causes several types of damage, most importantly grain spotting, rot, and panicle blight, which can result in yield losses of 75% or more (1,3). In recent years, symptoms including sheath rot, grain spotting, grain rot, and panicle blight have been observed in both inbred and hybrid rice varieties. These symptoms resemble those of BPB and cause cultivar-dependent yield losses. (3) also reported the same symptoms for BPB. To confirm the cause of the disease, 21 rice panicles (Haridhan, a local variety) with typical BPB symptoms were collected from a farmer's field in the region of Mymensingh, Bangladesh during the rainy season in mid-October, 2021. Due to the severity of the outbreak, the panicles became dark brown and produced chaffy grains; nearly 100% of the rice panicles in that field were severely infected. To identify the causal pathogen(s), 1g of rice grains from 20 plants with typical BPB symptoms were surface-sterilized by immersing them in 70% ethanol for a few seconds followed by sodium hypochlorite solution (3%) for 1min. The grains were then rinsed with sterilized distilled water three times. Surface-sterilized grains were then ground with a mortar and pestle; 5mL of sterile distilled water was added during grinding. The extracted suspension (20µL) was then either streaked or spread onto the selective medium (S-PG) (2). Bacterial colonies showing purple color on the S-PG medium were selected and purified as candidate pathogens. For molecular characterization, species specific primers targeting gene were used to perform PCR and resulted in 479bp as reported by (4). To verify further, the PCR products of 16SF & 16SR were amplified and sequenced partially producing around 1400bp (1) and five 16SF partial sequences were deposited into NCBI GenBank (OP108276 to OP108280). 16S rDNA and revealed almost 99% homology with (KU851248.1, MZ425424.1) and (AB220893, CP033430) respectively using BLAST analysis. These purified bacterial isolates produced a diffusible light-yellow pigment on King's B medium indicating toxoflavin production (3). The candidate five bacterial isolates were then confirmed by inoculating 10ml suspension 10 CFU/mL into the panicles and sheaths of BRRIdhan28 in net house condition as described previously (1). All of the bacterial isolates obtained from the spotted rice grains pr
ISSN:0191-2917
1943-7692
DOI:10.1094/PDIS-02-23-0229-PDN