Abstract

The danger of Sclerotium cepivorum lies in the strength of its survival structure: sclerotia. Sclerotia comprising hardened mycelium contains food reserves that allow it to remain dormant for long period, which makes the sclerotia-infested soil useless to grow any crop of the Allium species, including onion and garlic. This paper would be the first report on the application of two-photon fluorescence microscopy to the analysis of the structure of sclerotia from S. cepivorum. For this study and, in order to test the method, two different types of sclerotia were used: (1) sclerotia isolated from naturally infested soil and (2) sclerotia produced in vitro (from 20-day-old cultures). Both types of sclerotia were processed by cryopreservation and eight µm histological cuts were used to obtain an autofluorescence image. For both sclerotia, the fluorescence spectrum has three peak signals at their wall. Sclerotia from infested soil presented fluorescence peaks at 400-436, 436-475, and 515-575nm, while signals from sclerotia produced in vitro presented fluorescence peaks at 400-442, 500-600, and 655-700nm. Peaks at the violet electromagnetic region (400-436 and 400-442) are like that of the signals reported by the melanin. This study showed that two-photon microscopy is a novel and valuable tool for the study of sclerotia structure and their fluorescence signal, and the possibility of using it as a specific marker to direct detection in the field should be explored.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call