Journal of Fungi (Mar 2024)

Unraveling the Life Cycle of <i>Nyssopsora cedrelae</i>: A Study of Rust Diseases on <i>Aralia elata</i> and <i>Toona sinensis</i>

  • Jae Sung Lee,
  • Makoto Kakishima,
  • Ji-Hyun Park,
  • Hyeon-Dong Shin,
  • Young-Joon Choi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof10040239
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. 239

Abstract

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Rust disease poses a major threat to global agriculture and forestry. It is caused by types of Pucciniales, which often require alternate hosts for their life cycles. Nyssopsora cedrelae was previously identified as a rust pathogen on Toona sinensis in East and Southeast Asia. Although this species had been reported to be autoecious, completing its life cycle solely on T. sinensis, we hypothesized that it has a heteroecious life cycle, requiring an alternate host, since the spermogonial and aecial stages on Aralia elata, a plant native to East Asia, are frequently observed around the same area where N. cedrelae causes rust disease on T. sinensis. Upon collecting rust samples from both A. elata and T. sinensis, we confirmed that the rust species from both tree species exhibited matching internal transcribed spacer (ITS), large subunit (LSU) rDNA, and cytochrome oxidase subunit III (CO3) mtDNA sequences. Through cross-inoculations, we verified that aeciospores from A. elata produced a uredinial stage on T. sinensis. This study is the first report to clarify A. elata as an alternate host for N. cedrelae, thus providing initial evidence that the Nyssopsora species exhibits a heteroecious life cycle.

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