Abstract

Northern Corn Leaf Blight (NCLB) is a fungal leaf disease in maize caused by Exserohilum turcicum. NCLB occurs worldwide, from tropical to temperate zones raising the question about plasticity of temperature adaptation of local isolates of the pathogen. Seven isolates of E. turcicum originating from South America and seven from Europe were compared for their response to temperature variations in vitro and in vivo between 15 and 30 °C. In vitro, isolates originating from Europe and South America significantly differed in mycelial growth rate at 30 °C and in sporulation at 25 °C and 30 °C. Aggressiveness of E. turcicum isolates was evaluated on three susceptible maize cultivars (maize lines B37, Sus1 and the German hybrid Niklas) under different day/night temperature regimes (15/10 °C, 20/15 °C, 25/20 °C, or 30/25 °C) with a photoperiod of 14 h. Aggressiveness, recorded as area under the disease progress curve (AUDPC), of South American isolates was higher than for European isolates at 15 °C, 20 °C and 25 °C, and for sporulation in vivo in all temperatures. In general, aggressiveness components were most influenced by temperature. Therefore, multivariate analysis was performed with aggressiveness component data at 30 °C, which expressed the highest number of variables with significant differences between isolate origins. According to their aggressiveness, European and South American isolates can be grouped separately, demonstrating that South American isolates are better adapted to higher temperatures and display a higher level of aggressiveness under similar conditions than European isolates from a cool climate. It is concluded that plasticity of temperature adaptation in E. turcicum populations is relatively large and allowed E. turcicum to follow the recent expansion of maize cultivation into cool climate zones in Europe. However, our data suggest that adaptation to higher temperature is likely to increase aggressiveness of NCLB on maize in cooler climate zones when experiencing further climate warming. This plasticity in adaptation to environmental conditions of E. turcicum may also hamper the success of breeding programs as it may decrease the durability of resistance.

Highlights

  • This plasticity in adaptation to environmental conditions of E. turcicum may hamper the success of breeding programs as it may decrease the durability of resistance

  • American isolates sporulated at a higher rate than European isolates at 25 ◦ C and 30 ◦ C

  • Our study provides evidence for a strong impact of temperature regimes on vigor and aggressiveness of E. turcicum which in turn was related to the origin of isolates from a warmer or cooler climate

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Summary

Introduction

Exserohilum turcicum, the causal agent of Northern Corn Leaf Blight (NCLB), occurs in all maize-producing regions, from tropical to temperate zones [1]. E. turcicum (teleomorph Setosphaeria turcica) causes cigar-shaped green-grey lesions on leaves, which become necrotic in later infection stages and may evolve to blight symptoms, leading to high yield losses in maize. Yield losses caused by NCLB are correlated with host phenological stage, insertion of the infected leaves and host resistance. Infections that occur from 2 to 3 weeks after pollination cause yield losses of up to 40% [2]. Young seedlings usually present higher NCLB susceptibility when compared to

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