Abstract

Fusarium oxysporum is a large complex cosmopolitan species composed of plant pathogens, human opportunistic pathogens, and nonpathogenic isolates. Many plant pathogenic strains are known based on host plant specificity and the large number of plant species attacked. F. oxysporum is an opportunistic pathogen in humans with a compromised immune system. The objectives of this study were: (1) to develop a specific marker to detect human opportunistic F. oxysporum (HOFo) isolates; (2) to determine whether or not HOFo isolates can colonize and cause disease symptoms in plants; and (3) to assess Taiwan isolates sensitivity to two agro-fungicides. The primer pair, Primer 5/ST33-R, specifically amplifying Taiwan and international reference HOFo isolates was developed and used to detect and assess the distribution of a Taiwan isolate in inoculated tomato plants and tomato and cucumber fruit. Taiwan HOFo isolate MCC2074 was shown to colonize tomato roots, hypocotyls, and cotyledons, but did not show any visible symptoms. Four days after surface inoculation of tomato and cucumber fruit with the same isolate, MCC2074 was detected in the pericarp and locular cavities of both tomato and cucumber fruit and in columella of tomato fruit. Three Taiwan HOFo isolates were found to be moderately sensitive to azoxystrobin and highly sensitive to difenconazole.

Highlights

  • Filamentous fungal human pathogens (FFHPs), commonly found in clinics and hospitals [1], affect patients with suppressed immune systems, such as those with immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), organ transplantation, and cancer chemotherapy [1, 2]

  • Among FFHPs, Fusarium spp. have been shown to cause fusariosis with disseminated infections in immunosuppressed patients resulting in mortality rates from 50 to 75% [3]

  • Identification and sensitivity of human opportunistic F. oxysporum (HOFo) isolates by specific primers Fourteen strains of HOFo intergenic spacer (IGS) region sequences obtained from NCBI GeneBank database were compared with the HOFo isolated from Taiwan and other Fo formae special isolates

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Summary

Introduction

Filamentous fungal human pathogens (FFHPs), commonly found in clinics and hospitals [1], affect patients with suppressed immune systems, such as those with immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), organ transplantation, and cancer chemotherapy [1, 2]. Among FFHPs, Fusarium spp. have been shown to cause fusariosis with disseminated infections in immunosuppressed patients resulting in mortality rates from 50 to 75% [3]. Human opportunistic F. oxysporum isolates on plant

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