• Title/Summary/Keyword: Spongospora subterranea

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Occurrence of Potato Powdery Scab Caused by Spongospora subterranea in Korea

  • Kim, Jeom-Soon;Ryu, Kyoung-Yul;Kim, Jong-Tae;Lee, Young-Gue;Cheon, Jeong-Uk
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.19 no.6
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    • pp.284-287
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    • 2003
  • Potato tubers with scab lesions were found in several regions of Gangwon province in Korea during disease surveys in 2000 and 2001. The lesions appeared as shallow scabs with torn and raised skin around the periphery of the lesion. Sometimes the lesions expanded on tuber surface and formed hollowed-out areas. The causal organism was identified as Spongospora subterranea based on morphological characteristics using light and electron microscope. Ten cultivars of potato were evaluated to select resistant cultivars against powdery scab. Among the 10 cultivars, Jowon, Superior, and Atlantic were resistant, while Sephody, Gawon, and Irish Cobbler were susceptible to powdery scab. In the pathogenicity test, typical symptoms of powdery scab were formed on potato tubers, and galls developed on root hairs. This is the first report of powdery scab of potato caused by S. subterranea in Korea.

Assembled and Annotated Genome of Plasmodiophora brassicae with Insights into Developmental Stage-Specific

  • Schwelm, Arne
    • 한국균학회소식:학술대회논문집
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    • 2015.05a
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    • pp.23-23
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    • 2015
  • Plasmodiophora brassicae is a major disease threat for Brassica oil and vegetable crop production worldwide. The causal agent is a Plasmodiophorid, which are obligate biotrophic plant-pathogenic protists in the Rhizarian kingdom. Although the Plasmodiophorids include other important agricultural pathogens such as Polymyxa betae, Spongospora subterranea, their biology remains poorly understood due to their intracellular biotrophic life style. I will present the assembled and annotated genome of P. brassicae, with insights into developmental stage-specific. We provide the first genomic data for pathogenic Rhizaria. The exploitation of the life stage specific transcripts will shed light in the understanding of the life cycle at a molecular basis, which will in the long run help to understand and control club root disease. Our data also fill an important gap for the understanding of the eukaryotic tree of life, since this is only the third genome of the eukaryotic kingdom of Rhizaria.

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