Abstract

Soybean rust (Phakopsora pachyrhizi) in Brazil is mainly controlled with applications of fungicides, including demethylation inhibitors (DMI) and quinone outside inhibitors (QoI). Isolates with less sensitivity to DMI and QoI have been reported, and these have been found to have mutations in the CYP51 and CYTB genes, respectively. There have been no reports of fitness costs in isolates with mutations in CYP51 and CYTB, and the aim of this work was to compare the competitive ability of isolates with lower DMI or QoI sensitivities with that of sensitive (wild-type) isolates. Urediniospores of sensitive wild-type isolates and isolates with different CYP51 or CYTB alleles were mixed and inoculated on detached soybean leaves. After 3 weeks, urediniospores were harvested and used as inoculum for the next disease cycle. Frequencies of relevant target site mutations were monitored using the pyrosequencing method over four disease cycles. Isolates with lower DMI sensitivity and different CYP51 alleles had competitive disadvantages compared with a DMI-sensitive, wild-type CYP51 isolate. In contrast, the isolate with the F129L mutation in the CYTB gene competed equally well with a QoI-sensitive, wild-type CYTB isolate under the conditions of this experiment. The CYP51 and CYTB alleles were stable in all isolates over four disease cycles when cultivated alone.

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