Diversity and Pathogenicity of Fusarium Species Associated with Stalk and Crown Rot in Maize in Northern Italy

Plants (Basel). 2023 Nov 15;12(22):3857. doi: 10.3390/plants12223857.

Abstract

The genus Fusarium includes several agronomically important and toxin-producing species that are distributed worldwide and can cause a wide range of diseases. Crown and stalk rot and grain infections are among the most severe symptoms that Fusarium spp. can cause in maize. Disease development usually occurs during germination, but it may also affect the later phases of plant growth. The purpose of this study was to investigate the diversity and pathogenicity of 41 isolates recovered from symptomatic seedlings collected in Northern Italy and seeds of five different geographical origins in 2019 and 2020. The pathogenicity was tested and confirmed in 23 isolates causing rotting in maize seedlings, with disease indexes from 20% to 90%. A multilocus phylogeny analysis based on four genomic loci (tef1-α, rpb2, calm and tub2) was performed on 23 representative isolates. Representative isolates were identified as species belonging to three species complexes (SC), including Fusarium verticillioides and F. annulatum in the F. fujikuroi SC. Fusarium commune was identified in the F. nisikadoi SC, and three different lineages were found in the Fusarium oxysporum SC. This study reports F. annulatum and two lineages of the Fusarium oxysporum SC as maize pathogens for the first time in Italy.

Keywords: F. fujikuroi SC; F. nisikadoi SC; F. oxysporum SC; Zea mays L.; multilocus sequence typing.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by AGROINNOVA DIAGNOSTICS Laboratory. www.agroinnova.unito.it.