First report of Podosphaera macularis causing hop (Humulus lupulus) powdery mildew in Brazil

Plant Dis. 2021 Mar 23. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-01-21-0094-PDN. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The hop (Humulus lupulus L.) is a dioecious perennial climbing plant grown commercially worldwide. Wild hops are widely distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere, Europe, Asia, and North America (Neve, 1991). In the Southern Hemisphere, some of the leading hop-producing countries include South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. Brazil began hop production less than 5 years ago. In January 2019, amphigenous white powdery circular fungal colonies were observed on the leaves and stems of hop plants (cultivar Chinook) within a 900m2 hop garden in Lages municipality, Santa Catarina State, southern Brazil. The incidence of the disease was present on almost 100 per cent of "Chinook" cultivar plants and diseased foliage was collected to identify the pathogen and used to inoculate healthy plants. Hop powdery mildew lesions with hyaline and septate mycelium with chains of unicellular conidia (n =100) hyaline, barrel-shaped, mean of length/width ± standard deviation 25-27 × 13-18 µm ± 0.980, with fibrosin bodies, and conidiophores erect with cylindrical foot cells, were visible within 10 days. The causal agent was identified as Podosphaera macularis (Wallr.:Fr.) Lind (synonym S. humuli (DC.) Burrill) on the basis of conidial shape, size and host range (Royle 1978; Braun 1987; Mahaffee et al., 2009), complemented with the present molecular analysis. Chasmothecia have not been observed in the field to date. A conidial suspension of 200 ml at concentration of 1.4 x 105 was mixed with 5ul of Tween® 20 for the pathogenicity assay. Ten plants of 9-month-old of hop "Chinook" cultivar, were inoculated with 5 ml of the conidial suspension using a manual spray. The control plot was only sprayed with water. The inoculated plants were maintained at 22ºC ± 1ºC with a 12-hour photoperiod and 65% relative humidity. White mycelia were visible first on the adaxial leaf surfaces of the inoculated younger leaves after 10 days and the disease severity reached between 2 to 5%. No symptoms were observed at the control plot. P. macularis infected most aerial plant tissues of the inoculated plants and caused approximately 50% of cones losses. P. macularis conidia were collected from the infected leaf tissue with a sterile soft camel-hair brush and DNA was extracted using a Wizard Genomic DNA extraction kit. The primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al., 1990) were used to amplified and sequenced a fragment of the ITS region. PCR products were subjected to Sanger Sequencing to confirm sample species. The resulting 522-bp sequence was deposited into GenBank (accession n°. MN630490). BLASTn showed a 99.81% sequence identity with the CT1 isolate of P. macularis from H. lupulus (MH687414). The presence and identification of P. macularis in hop production regions is a new challenge to growers in Brazil. Research related to the knowledge of the disease cycle, epidemiology, and control strategies for the integrated management should be conducted, as there are no registered fungicides for powdery mildew on hop in Brazil. To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. macularis in Brazil, as well as in South America. References Braun, U. (1987) A Monograph of the Erysiphales (Powdery Mildews). J. Cramer, Berlin, German Democratic Republic. p 113. Mahaffee, W. F., Pethybridge, S.J., Gent, D.H (2009) Compendium of hop diseases and pests. The American Phytopathological Society Press, Saint Paul, Minnesota. Neve R. A (1991). Hops. Chapman and Hall: London. Royle, D. J (1978). Powdery mildew of the hop. Pages 381-409 in: The Powdery Mildews. D. M. Spencer, ed. Academic Press, New York. White, T. J., Bruns, T., Lee, S., and Taylor, J. (1990). Amplification and direct sequencing of fungal ribosomal RNA genes for phylogenetics. pp. 315-322 in: PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. M. Innis, D. Gelfand, J. Sninsky, and T. White, eds. Academic Press, San Diego.

Keywords: diagnosis,; disease; epidemiology,.