Abstract

Gilbertella persicaria is a pathogenic fungus recently reported as a causative agent of soft rot in papaya fruits. Here the interactions between G. persicaria and papaya fruits was analyzed under laboratory conditions using histological techniques and optical microscopy to elucidate the process of pathogenesis. Healthy and disinfested fruits of papaya cv. Maradol were also inoculated with a suspension of sporangiospores of G. persicaria. Tissue sections were cut, which were subjected to differential staining with safranin-fast green for different times. Sporangiospores presumably adhered to the cuticle of the fruit by 3 h post inoculation (hpi) and germinated by 6 hpi; invasive intracellular hyphae were growing in host cells by 9 hpi. By 15 hpi, fruit epidermis was macerated, presumably by enzymatic activity reported for mucoral fungal species and appeared as a wet-looking lesion on the cuticle. Fruit mesocarp was colonized by 30 hpi, and asexual reproduction structures had formed by 48 hpi. This process of infection and disease development of G. persicaria in papaya fruits corresponds to that used by pathogens with a necrotrophic lifestyle.

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