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First report of Alternaria tenuissima and Alternaria infectoria on organic spelt wheat in Serbia apsjournals.apsnet.org /doi/abs/10.1094/PDIS-11-14-1109-PDN Welcome Sign in | Register | Mobile Previous Article | Next Article Accepted for publication http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-11-14-1109-PDN Ms. Jovana Đisalov Institute of Food Technology, Bulevar cara Lazara 1, Novi Sad, Serbia, 21000; Dr. Marija Bodroža-Solarov Novi Sad, Serbia; Dr. Ferenc Bagi Novi Sad, Serbia; Dr. Kristina Petrović Novi Sad, Serbia; Dr. Jelena Ćulafić Novi Sad, Serbia; Dr. Aleksandra Bočarov-Stančić Novi Sad, Serbia; Dr. Tea Brlek Novi Sad, Serbia; PDF Print PDF with Links Spelt wheat (Triticum aestivum ssp. spelta L. Thell) is one of the oldest cultivated hulled grains with high nutritional properties and great adaptability in different ecosystems. Spelt is an ideal grain crop for sustainable and organic farming due to hulls which serve as barriers against pathogens (Vučković et al. 2013). A marked increase in black point disease incidence on spelt wheat was detected in Vojvodina, North Serbia in 2012. The potential risk of black point disease on cereal production in Serbia is related not so much to yield decrease, such to post-harvest losses and reduction of baking quality due to decreased nutritive value, discoloration and insipidness. Five different spelt wheat genotypes from organic production were collected. From each sample, 100 kernels were surface-disinfected in 0,4% NaOCl for 2 min, rinsed with sterilized, distilled water, then placed on filter paper in petri plates in four repetitions. Incubation was performed at 25°C for 7 days in darkness. Alternaria single spores were isolated from black point diseased spelt kernels and cultivated on potato carrot agar (PCA) at 24°C for 7 days under 8h/16h periods of light/dark (Simmons et al. 2007). Selection of five Alternaria isolates was conducted randomly including 5 isolates from each spelt cultivar. A total of 22 isolates formed compact cottony mycelia with 2-3 concentric zones varying from greenish black to olive gray and 1 to 2 mm white margin. Chains of 6-14 conidia occasionally branched in a sympodial manner with 3-5 conidia in each lateral chain. Conidia were ovoid to obclavate with narrowly tapered upper half, septated with 3-7 transepta and ranged in size 20.5 to 45 × 9 to 16.5 μm. Based on morphological and growth features isolates were identified as Alternaria tenuissima. Other 3 isolates produced woolly whitish colonies, with dark orange under surface. Concentric rings varied from white center to olive green zones with light orange pigmentation. Conidial chains consisted of 3-8 conidia with numerous branching patterns. Very small 1-2 celled conidia were narrow ovoid or ellipsoid measuring 15 to 25 × 4.5 to 7 μm. Such morphological features indicated Alternaria infectoria. Pathogenicity of both species was tested by soaking kernels in conidial suspensions (106 conidia/ml) harvested from 7-day-old cultures on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Control kernels were dipped in sterile distilled water. After 7 days, kernels that developed black point symptoms on all inoculated kernels were similar to those naturally occurring on the original kernels. No symptoms were observed on any of the control kernels. Morphological identification was confirmed by amplification and sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA (White et al.1990). Total DNA was extracted directly from fungal mycelium with a DNA Isolation Kit (Agilent Technologies, USA) and PCR amplification performed with primers ITS1F/ITS4. Amplified fragments of isolates were in the range of 569-579 bp with clear separation of 3 isolates yielded in length of 613-618 bp. ITS sequence analysis revealed that 22 isolates (GenBank Accession No. KM516062-KM516083) shared 100% identity with reference isolate A. tenuissima CBS 918.96 (EF031053) while 3 isolates (KM516084KM516086) were 100% identical to A. infectoria CBS 210.86 (FM958526). Black point disease on spelt kernels caused by A.alternata was previously detected in Poland (Kurowski and Wysocka, 2009). To our knowledge, this is the first report of A.tenuissima and A.infectoria detected on spelt wheat in Serbia. References: Kurowski T.P. and Wysocka U. Phytopathol. 54: 45, 2009. Simmons E. G. Alternaria. An Identification Manual. CBS Fungal Biodiversity Centre, Utrecht, the Netherlands, 2007. Vučković J. et al. J. Sci. Food Agric. 93 :1996, 2013. White T. J. et al. Page 315 in: PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, CA, 1990.