Identification of New Fusarium sulawense Strains Causing Soybean Pod Blight in China and Their Control Using Carbendazim, Dipicolinic Acid and Kojic Acid

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Aug 24;19(17):10531. doi: 10.3390/ijerph191710531.

Abstract

Soybean plants are highly susceptible to Fusarium species, which significantly reduce soybean production and quality. Several Fusarium species have been reported to synthesize mycotoxins, such as trichothecene, which have been related to major human diseases. In November 2021, soybean pods in Nantong municipality, China, showed black necrotic lesions during the harvest stage. The disease incidence reached 69%. The pathogen was identified as Fusarium sulawense via morphological analysis and sequencing of ITS, EF1-α and RPB2 genes. A PCR assay with primers targeting the trichothecene biosynthesis genes suggested that the three isolates could synthesize trichothecenes. The effectiveness of fungicide carbendazim and natural metabolites dipicolinic acid and kojic acid was screened for the management of F. sulawense on postharvest soybean pods. The highest efficacy was obtained when combining 3.8 mg/mL carbendazim and 0.84 mg/mL dipicolinic acid (curative efficacy: 49.1% lesion length inhibition; preventive efficacy: 82.7% lesion length inhibition), or 1.9 mg/mL carbendazim and 0.71 mg/mL kojic acid (preventive efficacy: 84.9% lesion length inhibition). Collectively, this report will lead to a better understanding of the safety hazards found in soybean products in China and reveals the application of dipicolinic and kojic acids to reduce the use of carbendazim.

Keywords: Fusarium species; antifungal activity; carbendazim; causal agent; mycotoxins; soybean diseases.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Benzimidazoles
  • Carbamates
  • Fusarium* / genetics
  • Glycine max
  • Humans
  • Picolinic Acids
  • Pyrones
  • Triticum

Substances

  • Benzimidazoles
  • Carbamates
  • Picolinic Acids
  • Pyrones
  • kojic acid
  • carbendazim
  • dipicolinic acid

Supplementary concepts

  • Fusarium sulawesiense

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, grant number 32172441, the Nantong Applied Research Program, grant number JC2020103, the Rural Revitalization Science and Technology Project of Shaanxi Province, grant number 2022FP-01, the Social and Livelihood Project of Nantong, grant number MS12020069, and the Large Instruments Open Foundation of Nantong University, grant numbers KFJN2130, KFJN2135 and KFJN2233.