Abstract

As a commonly traditional Chinese medicine, the perennial herb Dangshen (Codonopsis pilosula) has superior curative effects including regulating immunity, strengthening the spleen, and tonifying lungs (Bai et al. 2020). To imitate natural ecological conditions, plants were grown on hillside fields with stems prostrate on the ground, tangle-up with each other. In August 2020, leaf spots were observed on C. pilosula in Wutai county, Shanxi province, China, and indicated a high disease incidence (70%-80%) in investigated fields (6.67 ha). Small brown necrotic spots, occasionally enclosed by chlorotic halos, were observed on leaves, stems, and sepals. For identification of the pathogen, 15 small pieces (5×5 mm) of symptomatic tissues from 5 randomly-collected diseased plants were surface sterilized, placed on potato dextrose agar plates, and incubated for 4 d in darkness at 25 °C to obtain the colonies. Cultures were purified by single spore isolation from these colonies. A total of 15 isolates named as Dcp-3, and Dcp-5~Dcp-18 were recovered. They produced ovoid or obclavate spores with 15.9-57.5×9.1-20.1 μm in size, 1-6 transverse septa, and 0-4 longitudinal septa. The conidial chains with 4 to 6 spores had numerous secondary and occasionally tertiary chains on potato carrot agar plates. Because all isolates had identical morphological traits, five genes from the representative isolate Dcp-3, actin (ACT), Alternaria major allergen (Alt a1), plasma membrane ATPase (ATP), histone 3 (H3), and rDNA ITS, were amplified with primer pairs ACTDF1/ACTDR1, Alt-for/Alt-rev, ATPDF1/ATPDR1, H3-1a/H3-1b, and ITS1/ITS4, respectively (Hong et al. 2005; Lawrence et al. 2013; Ma et al. 2020). BLASTn searches indicated species of Dcp-3 could not be accurately confirmed by rDNA ITS, ATP, ACT, and Alt a1 (GenBank accession nos. OM334894, OM362504, OM326344, OM362500). Phylogenetic analysis showed it was most closely related to Alternaria alternata, A. arborescens, and A. tenuissima based on concatenated sequences of above four genes. The H3 sequence (OM362508) shared 100% homology with that of A. alternata (MN481948). The phylogenetic tree using H3 also confirmed Dcp-3 as A. alternata. Heathly, two-year-old C. pilosula were transplanted to a greenhouse. A surface-sterilized leaf was sprayed with 50 μL spore suspension (106 conidia/mL) of Dcp-3. A leaf sprayed with isometric sterile water was used as controls. Each treatment used six plants (five leaves per plant). Plants were covered with sterilized plastic bags and incubated at 22 ℃. The test was repeated twice. A week later, control leaves were healthy, but brown necrotic spots similar to field symptoms emerged on treated leaves. The A. alternata isolates were re-isolated from the border of lesions, and confirmed by morphological and molecular characteristics mentioned above, fulfilling Koch's postulates. Leaf spot of C. pilosula caused by Septoria codonopsidis has been reported in China (Wang et al. 2011). However, to our knowledge, this is the first report of A. alternata inciting leaf spot of C. pilosula in China. Our report would promote growers to enhance the field management and consider associated strategies on controlling Alternaria leaf spot of C. pilosula.

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