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Development and use of a model system to monitor clubroot disease progression with an Australian field collection of Plasmodiophora brassicae

journal contribution
posted on 2009-02-01, 00:00 authored by Arati Agarwal, V Kaul, Robert FaggianRobert Faggian, David CahillDavid Cahill
A modified sand–liquid culture method facilitated easy visualisation of the primary life cycle stages of Plasmodiophora brassicae within clean root hairs of the Arabidopsis host. Pathogen penetration occurred from day 4 onwards and then primary plasmodia developed within the host root. Several Arabidopsis ecotypes tested in varying growth conditions showed differences in disease expression. Defined growth cabinet conditions were found most suitable for studying disease progression in the ecotypes and for achieving uniform infection and disease development. Arabidopsis ecotypes Ta-0 and Tsu-0 known to be partially resistant to a German single-spore isolate of P. brassicae were susceptible to an Australian (Victorian) field population of P. brassicae. The European clubroot differential test was used to confirm virulence and describe the pathotype of the Victorian field population. Knowledge of the interaction of an Australian population of P. brassicae with its host will provide valuable information on a disease which is very difficult to control.

History

Journal

Australasian plant pathology

Volume

38

Issue

2

Pagination

120 - 127

Publisher

Australasian Plant Pathology Society

Location

[Adelaide, S. Aust]

ISSN

0815-3191

eISSN

1448-6032

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Springer