Abstract

Coleus (Plectranthus scutellarioides [L.] R.Br.[syn.: Solenostemon scutellarioides]) is a perennial plant in the Lamiaceae family. It produces variegated leaves of various colors. It is commonly cultivated as an ornamental plant or grown in commercial greenhouses (Garibaldi et al. 2019). Phelipanche aegyptiaca Pers. is a dicotyledonous holoparasitic flowering plant that parasitizes more than 30 food crops (e.g., tomato, sunflower, and chickpea), ornamental crops, and others in different parts of the world, causing heavy economic losses (Nosratti et al. 2020). In 2016 and 2017, broomrape was observed parasitizing coleus in the greenhouse (86° 3' 36" E, 44° 18' 36" N, 500 m elevation) in Shihezi, Xinjiang, China (Supplementary Figure 1A-D). A single coleus plant could be parasitized by average 6-10 broomrape plants, and 20% of coleus plants were infested. The infection was confirmed by verifying the attachment of the broomrape to the coleus root. The inflorescences of the broomrape were normal and healthy and produced germinable seeds (germination rate: 80-90%). The morphological characteristics of the coleus are shown in Supplementary Figures 6 and 7. The main botanical features of the broomrape are as follows: (i) stem 20.65±7.07 cm tall, erect, branched, frail, rather hairy, bulbous at the base with secondary roots; (ii) inflorescence usually many-flowered, lax and cylindrical; (iii) bracts 6.87±0.93 mm long, ovate to lanceolate; (iv) calyx 1.09±0.09 cm long, shortly campanulate; (v) corolla 3.38±0.19 cm long, erect to suberect, white at the base, blue-purple in the upper part, sparsely glandular-villous; (vi) stamens 4, filaments inserted 5-6 mm from the base of the corolla, 1.26±0.11 cm long, anthers with villous; (vii) pistil 2.9±0.15 cm long, ovary glabrous, style with short glandular hairs, stigma bilobed, white (Supplementary Figure 2) (Teimoury et al. 2012; Piwowarczyk et al. 2019). For molecular identification, total genomic DNA was extracted from the flowers of the broomrape (found parasitizing coleus plants), and the ribosomal protein S2 (rps2) and ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region were amplified by PCR using the primer pairs rps2F/rps2R, ITS1/ITS4 (Table 1) (Park et al. 2007; Anderson et al. 2004). Two sequences with 580 bp (ITS) and 443 bp (rps2) were obtained (GenBank accession No. MW811482 and MW883573). BLAST analysis showed that the ITS sequence was most similar (identity 100%) to P. aegyptiaca (KC811171) and the rps2 sequence (identity 99%) also matched that of P. aegyptiaca (KC814957). Phylogenetic analysis of the ITS regions and rps2 genes showed that broomrape was fallen into P. aegyptiaca groups (Supplementary Figure 3). Morphological and molecular findings strongly support the conclusion that the broomrape on coleus was P. aegyptiaca. In order to verify that coleus was a host of P. aegyptiaca, coleus seedlings were collected and moved to 1.5-L pots containing a mixture of compost-vermiculite-sand (1:1:1 v:v:v) and seeds of P. aegyptiaca harvested from the host coleus (50 mg of P. aegyptiaca seeds per 1 kg of the substrate). Another three coleus seedlings were transplanted into pots of the same size containing the same mixture as above without P. aegyptiaca seeds. These served as controls. After 90 days of inoculation, the leaves of the infected hosts were lighter in color than those of uninfected hosts (Supplementary Figures 4A, 6). The roots of coleus and P. aegyptiaca were carefully washed with water, and an average of 3-4 emerged broomrape shoots and 50-60 underground attachments were observed on coleus roots (Supplementary Figure 4B). P. aegyptiaca can develop normally in the root of the coleus plant, from germination through attachment to host roots and development of tubercles (Supplementary Figure 5 A-E). Longitudinal and transverse sections of the parasite and host roots at the tubercle stage revealed that the endophytic tissues of P. aegyptiaca had reached and connected to the host vascular bundle (Supplementary Figure 5F-I), confirming the normal biological development and function of P. aegyptiaca haustoria. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of P. aegyptiaca parasitizing coleus in Xinjiang, China. Coleus is a very widely cultivated horticultural ornamental plant, and it grows in the same environments favored by P. aegyptiaca; so, the plant can aid the transmission of P. aegyptiaca to previously clear regions. It is necessary to improve the management of coleus in places where P. aegyptiaca is prevalent so as to reduce its spread.

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