Percorrer por autor "Raco, Milica"
A mostrar 1 - 4 de 4
Resultados por página
Opções de ordenação
- Marine oomycetes of the genus halophytophthora harbor viruses related to bunyavirusesPublication . Botella, Leticia; Janoušek, Josef; Maia, Cristiana; Jung, Marilia Horta; Raco, Milica; Jung, ThomasWe investigated the incidence of RNA viruses in a collection of Halophytophthora spp. from estuarine ecosystems in southern Portugal. The first approach to detect the presence of viruses was based on the occurrence of dsRNA, typically considered as a viral molecule in plants and fungi. Two dsRNA-banding patterns (∼7 and 9 kb) were observed in seven of 73 Halophytophthora isolates tested (9.6%). Consequently, two dsRNA-hosting isolates were chosen to perform stranded RNA sequencing for de novo virus sequence assembly. A total of eight putative novel virus species with genomic affinities to members of the order Bunyavirales were detected and their full-length RdRp gene characterized by RACE. Based on the direct partial amplification of their RdRp gene by RT-PCR multiple viral infections occur in both isolates selected. Likewise, the screening of those viruses in the whole collection of Halophytophthora isolates showed that their occurrence is limited to one single Halophytophthora species. To our knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating the presence of negative (-) ssRNA viruses in marine oomycetes.
- Preserving the biologically coherent generic concept of , "plant destroyer".Publication . Brasier, Clive M.; Grünwald, Niklaus J.; Bourret, Tyler B.; Govers, Francine; Scanu, Bruno; Cooke, David E. L.; Bose, Tanay; Hawksworth, David L.; Abad, Z Gloria; Albarracin, M. Victoria; Alsultan, Wael; Altamirano-Junqueira, Astrid E; Arifin, Arild R.; Arnet, Matthew J.; Aumentado, Herbert Dustin R.; Bakonyi, József; Belisle, Wei H.; Benigno, Alessandra; Bienapfl, John C.; Bilodeau, Guillaume J; Blair, Jaime E.; Botella, Leticia; Brandano, Andrea; Cacciola, Santa Olga; Carbone, Ignazio; Castroagudin, Vanina L.; Chaendaekattu, Narayanan; Consford, Jonathan D.; Corcobado, Tamara; Covey, Paul A.; Daniels, Hazel A.; Deidda, Antonio; Dorrance, Anne E.; Dort, Erika N.; Drenth, André; Drizou, Fryni; Evangelisti, Edouard; Fajardo, Sebastian N.; Fang, Yufeng; Ference, Christopher M.; Frankel, Susan J.; Goss, Erica M.; Guest, David I.; Hardy, Giles E. S. J.; Harris, Anna R. H.; Hawku, Mehari Desta; Heungens, Kurt; Hong, Chuanxue; Horner, Ian J.; Jung, Marília Horta; Iyanda, Olumayowa J.; Jamieson, Brittney-Aidan; Jeffers, Steven N.; Judelson, Howard S.; Junaid, Muhammad; Kalogeropoulou, Eleni; Kamoun, Sophien; Kang, Seogchan; Kasuga, Takao; Kudláček, Tomáš; LeBoldus, Jared; Lee, Christopher A.; Li, DeWei; Llanos, Alejandro K.; Lopez-Nicora, Horacio D.; Machado, Helena; di San Lio, Gaetano Magnano; Maia, Cristiana; Mandal, Kajal; Manosalva, Patricia; Martin, Frank N.; Matson, Michael E H; McDougal, Rebecca L.; McDowell, John M.; Michelmore, Richard W.; Milenković, Ivan; Moricca, Salvatore; Mostowfizadeh-Ghalamfarsa, Reza; Nagy, Zoltán Á.; Nikolaeva, Ekaterina V.; Ortega-López, Paula; Paap, Trudy; Parada-Rojas, Camilo H.; Hand, Francesca Peduto; Pérez-Sierra, Ana; Pettersson, Martin; Prasad, Pramod; Puig, Alina S.; Raco, Milica; Rajput, Nasir A.; Ristaino, Jean B.; Rooney-Latham, Suzanne; Seidl, Michael F.; Shamoun, Simon F.; Solla, Alejandro; Spies, Christoffel F. J.; Sudermann, Martha A.; Swiecki, Tedmund J.; Tian, Miaoying; Tripathy, Sucheta; Uematsu, Seiji; Van Poucke, Kris; Vichou, Aikaterini E.; Walter, Monika; Webber, Joan F.; Williams, Nari M.; Wingfield, Michael J.; Yadav, Dhananjay; Yang, Xiao; Jung, ThomasPhytophthora is a long-established, well-known, and globally important genus of plant pathogens. Phylogenetic evidence has shown that the biologically distinct, obligate biotrophic downy mildews evolved from Phytophthora at least twice. Because, cladistically, this renders Phytophthora “paraphyletic,” it has been proposed that Phytophthora evolutionary clades be split into multiple genera (Crous et al. 2021; Runge et al. 2011; Thines 2023, 2024). In this letter, we review arguments for the retention of the generic name Phytophthora with a broad circumscription made by Brasier et al. (2022) and by many delegates at an open workshop organized by The American Phytopathological Society. We present our well-considered responses to the genus splitting proposals, both in general terms and in terms of the specific proposals for new genera, alongside new information regarding the biological properties and mode of origin of the Phytophthora clades. We consider that the proposals are mostly non-rigorous and not supported by the scientific evidence. Further, given (i) the apparent lack of any distinguishing biological characteristics (synapomorphies) between the Phytophthora clades; (ii) the fundamental monophyly of Phytophthora in the original Haeckelian sense (Haeckel 1877); (iii) the fact that paraphyly is not a justification for taxonomic splitting; and (iv) the considerable likely damage to effective scientific communication and disease management from an unnecessary breakup of the genus, we report that workshop delegates voted unanimously in favor of preserving the current generic concept and for seeking endorsement of this view by a working group of the International Commission on the Taxonomy of Fungi.
- A survey in natural forest ecosystems of Vietnam reveals high diversity of both new and described Phytophthora taxa including P. ramorumPublication . Jung, Thomas; Scanu, Bruno; Brasier, C. M.; Webber, Joan; Milenković, Ivan; Corcobado, Tamara; Tomšovský, Michal; Pánek, Matěj; Bakonyi, József; Maia, Cristiana; Bačová, Aneta; Raco, Milica; Rees, Helen; Pérez-Sierra, Ana; Horta Jung, MaríliaIn 2016 and 2017, surveys of Phytophthora diversity were performed in 25 natural and semi-natural forest stands and 16 rivers in temperate and subtropical montane and tropical lowland regions of Vietnam. Using baiting assays from soil samples and rivers and direct isolations from naturally fallen leaves, 13 described species, five informally designated taxa and 21 previously unknown taxa of Phytophthora were isolated from 58 of the 91 soil samples (63.7%) taken from the rhizosphere of 52 of the 64 woody plant species sampled (81.3%) in 20 forest stands (83.7%), and from all rivers: P. capensis, P. citricola VII, VIII, IX, X and XI, P. sp. botryosa-like 2, P. sp. meadii-like 1 and 2, P. sp. tropicalis-like 2 and P. sp. multivesiculata-like 1 from Phytophthora major phylogenetic Clade 2; P. castaneae and P. heveae from Clade 5; P. chlamydospora, P. gregata, P. sp. bitahaiensis-like and P. sp. sylvatica-like 1, 2 and 3 from Clade 6; P. cinnamomi (Pc), P. parvispora, P. attenuata, P. sp. attenuata-like 1, 2 and 3 and P. ×heterohybrida from Clade 7; P. drechsleri, P. pseudocryptogea, P. ramorum (Pr) and P. sp. kelmania from Clade 8, P. macrochlamydospora, P. sp. ×insolita-like, P. sp. ×kunnunara-like, P. sp. ×virginiana-like s.l. and three new taxa, P. sp. quininea-like, P. sp. ×Grenada 3-like and P. sp. ×Peru 4-like, from Clade 9; and P. sp. gallica-like 1 and 2 from Clade 10. The A1 and A2 mating types of both Pc and Pr co-occurred. The A2 mating type of Pc was associated with severe dieback of montane forests in northern Vietnam. Most other Phytophthora species, including Pr, were not associated with obvious disease symptoms. It is concluded that (1) Vietnam is within the center of origin of most Phytophthora taxa found including Pc and Pr, and (2) Phytophthora clades 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 are native to Indochina.
- The virome of the panglobal, wide host-range plant pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi: phylogeography and evolutionary insightsPublication . Botella, Leticia; Hejna, Ondřej; Kudláček, Tomáš; Kovačiková, Kateřina; Rost, Michael; Forgia, Marco; Raco, Milica; Milenković, Ivan; Corcobado, Tamara; Maia, Cristiana; Scanu, Bruno; Drenth, André; Guest, David I; Liew, Edward C Y; Chi, Nguyen Minh; Thu, Pham Quang; Chang, Tun-Tschu; Fu, Chuen-Hsu; Kageyama, Koji; Hieno, Ayaka; Masuja, Hayato; Uematsu, Seiji; Durán, Álvaro; Tarigan, Marthin; Junaid, Muhammad; Nasri, Muhammad; Sanfuentes, Muhammad; Čurn, Vladislav; Webber, Joan F; Brasier, Joan F; Jung, Marília Horta; Jung, ThomasPhytophthora cinnamomi stands out as one of the most devastating plant pathogens worldwide, rapidly expanding its range and impacting a wide range of host species. In this study, we investigated the virome of P. cinnamomi across 222 isolates from Africa, Asia, Europe, Oceania, and the Americas using stranded total RNA sequencing, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction screening, and Sanger sequencing of selected isolates. Our analysis revealed that virus infections were prevalent across all sampled populations, including RNA viruses associated with the orders Ghabrivirales, Martellivirales, and Tolivirales, and the classes Amabiliviricetes, Bunyaviricetes, and the recently proposed Orpoviricetes. Viruses were mainly found in East and Southeast Asian populations, within the geographic origin of P. cinnamomi but have also spread to new regions where the pathogen has emerged as a clonal destructive pathogen. Among the identified viruses, eight species, including two bunya-like viruses, one narna-like virus, and five ormycoviruses, exhibit a global distribution with some genetic divergence between continents. The interaction between P. cinnamomi and its virome indicates a dynamic coevolution across diverse geographic regions. Indonesia is indicated to be the viral epicentre of P. cinnamomi, with the highest intra- and interspecies diversity of viruses. Viral diversity is significantly enhanced in regions where sexual recombination of P. cinnamomi occurs, while regions with predominantly asexual reproduction harbour fewer viral species. Interestingly, only the partially self-fertile mating type (MAT) A2, associated with the global pandemic, facilitates the spread of viruses across different biogeographic regions, whereas viruses are absent in the self-sterile MAT A1 in its areas of introduction like Australia and South Africa. Intriguingly, the presence of a plant tombusvirus suggests a potential cross-kingdom infection among Chilean isolates and a plant host. This study sheds further light on the geographical origin of P. cinnamomi from a novel virome perspective.
