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Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
Taxonomy and History: Hemileia vastatrix Berk. and
Broome (Basidiomycota, Pucciniales) was described in 1869 in
eastern Africa and Ceylon as the agent of coffee leaf rust and
has spread to all coffee cultivation areas worldwide. Major disease
outbreaks in Asia, Africa and America caused and continue
to cause severe yield losses, making this the most important
disease of Arabica coffee, a cash crop for many tropical and subtropical
countries.
Life cycle and Disease symptoms: Hemileia vastatrix
is a hemicyclic fungus with the urediniosporic life cycle as its
most important (if not only) source of inoculum. Chlorotic spots
are the first macroscopic symptoms, preceding the differentiation
of suprastomatal, bouquet-shaped, orange-coloured uredinia.
The disease can cause yield losses of up to 35% and have a polyetic
epidemiological impact on subsequent years.
Disease control: Although the use of fungicides is one of
the preferred immediate control measures, the use of resistant
cultivars is considered to be the most effective and durable
disease control strategy. The discovery of ‘H ıbrido de Timor’ provided
sources of resistance that have been used in several breeding
programmes and that have been proven to be effective and
durable, as some have been in use for more than 30 years.
Genetic diversity and Molecular pathogenicity:
Although exhibiting limited genetic polymorphism, the very large
genome of H. vastatrix (c. 797 Mbp) conceals great pathological
diversity, with more than 50 physiological races. Gene expression
studies have revealed a very precocious activation of signalling
pathways and production of putative effectors, suggesting that
the plant–fungus dialogue starts as early as at the germ tube
stage, and have provided clues for the identification of avr
genes
Descrição
Pathogen profile
Palavras-chave
coffea coffee leaf rust Hemileia vastatrix obligate biotrophy Pucciniales
Contexto Educativo
Citação
MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY (2017) 18(8) , 1039–1051
Editora
BSPP & John Wiley
