Journal of Integrative Agriculture (Jan 2022)

Study on burrowing nematode, Radopholus similis, pathogenicity test system in tobacco as host

  • Si-hua YANG,
  • Li-rong ZHAO,
  • Sha DING,
  • Shi-qiao TANG,
  • Chun CHEN,
  • Huan-xin ZHANG,
  • Chun-ling XU,
  • Hui XIE

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 9
pp. 2652 – 2664

Abstract

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Radopholus similis (Cobb 1893) Thorne (1949) is a destructive migratory endoparasitic plant nematode. In this study, the pathogenic process of R. similis infection in Nicotiana benthamiana (tobacco) was studied using quartz sand culture in laboratory. The results showed that R. similis mainly parasitised the root cortex, leading to cortical cell decomposition and tissue decay. We optimised the inoculation conditions to establish a method for determining the pathogenicity of R. similis as follows: (1) a glass culture tube was filled with quartz sand (about 1/3 of the height) and sterilised twice; (2) 20-day-old N. benthamiana seedlings were transplanted into test tubes and cultivated for 10 days at (25±1)°C; (3) R. similis female nematodes were inoculated in the root rhizosphere at a rate of 150 nematodes per plant; (4) the number of nematodes, disease severity, and growth of the plant at 30 days post-inoculation (dpi) were determined. The pathogenicity of eight R. similis populations from different hosts was determined, which proved the feasibility of this method.

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