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First Report of Powdery Mildew Caused by Podosphaera xanthii on Acalypha indica in China.

Plant Disease 2024 April 10
Acalypha indica L. is an annual erect herb of the Euphorbiaceae family. This plant is found widely in the tropics and parts of Africa and Asia (Chakraborty et al. 2023). In China, A. indica is a vegetable and also used as a folk medicine due to its antipyretic and hemostatic, antibacterial and anti-inflammatory properties. In February 2022 and 2023, powdery mildew symptoms were observed on 70% of A. indica plants on the Hainan Medical University campus (19° 58' 53″ N; 110° 19' 47″ E) in Haikou, Hainan Province, China. Powdery mildew colonies covered the leaf surfaces and stems of affected plants, causing discoloration and defoliation. Mycelia were superficial and hyphal appressoria were nipple-shaped. Conidiophores (n =30) were unbranched, cylindrical, 66 to 150 × 10 to 15 µm, and produced three to five immature conidia in chains with a crenate outline. Foot cells (n =30) were cylindrical, straight or sometimes curved at the base, and 31 to 59 µm long. Conidia (n =100) were ellipsoid-ovoid to doliiform, 20 to 33 ×12 to 20 µm (length/width ratio = 1.3 to 2.4), with well-developed fibrosin bodies, and produced germ tubes from the lateral position. Based on these morphological characteristics, the pathogen was provisionally identified as Podosphaera xanthii (Braun and Cook 2012). The teleomorph was not observed. A specimen was deposited in the Hainan Medical University Plant Pathology Herbarium as HMAI-23. To confirm the genus identification and ascertain a putative species, genomic DNA was extracted from mycelium, conidiophores, and conidia using a fungal DNA kit (Omega Bio-Tek, USA). The rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region was amplified with primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990) and sequenced directly. The resulting 575-bp sequence was deposited in GenBank (accession no. OR775733). A BLASTn search in GenBank of this sequence showed 99% similarity with the ITS sequences of P. xanthii on plants of Fabaceae, Malvaceae and Cucurbitaceae family from China (MH143485, MT242593, MK439611 and MH143483), Thailand (LC270779 and LC270778), Korea (MG754404), Vietnam (KM260704), and Puerto Rico (OP882310). Additionally, the 28S rDNA region was amplified using the primer pairs NL1 and NL4 (O´Donnell 1993; accession no. OR784547). This region shared 99% similarity with P. xanthii isolates (LC371333, LC270780, AB936277, and OP765401) as well. To confirm pathogenicity, five healthy potted plants of A. indica were inoculated by gently pressing a powdery mildew-infected leaf onto 15 young leaves. Five non-inoculated plants served as controls. All plants were maintained in a greenhouse at 24 to 30°C, 70% relative humidity, with a 16-h photoperiod. After 7 days, inoculated leaves showed powdery mildew symptoms whereas no symptoms were observed on control plants. The fungal colonies observed on inoculated plants were morphologically identical to those found on the originally infected leaves collected from Hainan Province. Based on the morphological characteristics and molecular identification, the fungus was identified as P. xanthii. In different countries and regions, P. xanthii has been previously reported on A. indica from Sudan and India (Amano 1986). To our knowledge, this is the first record of P. xanthii infecting A. indica in China. We are concerned that the pathogen could become a threat to the widespread planting of A. indica in the future.

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