Late-cycle diseases (LCD) cause a significant deterioration in quality and reduce yields in soybean crops. In Argentina, in particular, leaf blight and purple seed stain, caused by the agent Cercospora kikuchii, and frog eye spot, caused by C. sojina, are the prevailing sources of diseases. The early, rapid and accurate detection of these phytopathogens becomes essential, and would contribute to preserving both the environment and the health of humans and animals by preventing the wasteful or improper use of chemicals such as pesticides. In order to detect Cercospora species in soybean plants at an early stage, immunochemical and molecular techniques were developed in this work. Strains from the NITE Biological Resource Center collection (Japan): Cercospora kikuchii NBRC 6711 and Cercospora sojina NBRC 6715 and regional isolates of C. kikuchii were used. To develop Dot-Blot and PCR techniques, experiments with plants undergoing different treatments were carried out: those experimentally inoculated with these fungi, those treated with sterile water and healthy plants as well. Both techniques allowed the detection, at early stages, of Cercospora species involved in two of the most frequent LCD in the country, when the cercosporin concentration produced by the fungus was higher than 3.93 ± 0.39 nmol·cyl -1 ±SD. The sensitivity between both techniques was very different. While Dot-Blot allowed the detection of the disease 4 days after inoculation, PCR detected it after 4 hours, even without visible symptoms of the disease.
Late-cycle diseases (LCD) are very frequent in soybean crops, quality deterioration and yield decrease being the ordinary consequences. One of the main problems associated with these diseases is that visible symptoms appear only at intermediate or advanced stages, close to the harvest time [
Among the causative agents of LCD, Cercospora genus species are a major problem. In Argentina , in particular, leaf blight and purple seed stain, whose agent is Cercospora kikuchii, and frog eye spot, caused by C. sojina, are common diseases that reduce the plant nutritional value and lead to severe crop damage [
Plants highly affected lose a large amount of foliage, resulting in an anticipated maturity with an inadequate filling of pods and a reduced germination of seeds. These pathologies can be controlled by many strategies such as the application of fertilizers, fungicides and herbicides, combined with the use of cultivars of greater genetic potential, the massive diffusion of transgenic materials in soybean and handling practices like direct sowing [
In general, the diagnosis of fungal phytopathogens is based on the observation of signs and symptoms of the disease which, in the case under study, are visible only when the disease is at an advanced stage. Hence, the early, rapid and accurate detection of these phytopathogens becomes essential, and would contribute to preserving both the environment and the health of humans and animals by preventing the wasteful or improper use of chemicals such as pesticides [
As a result of advances in biotechnology, new procedures, such as immunochemical and molecular techniques, are today available to complement or replace the traditional laboratory procedures, so as to accelerate the achievement of results and enable an earlier diagnosis of diseases [
Among the various immunochemical techniques, Dot-ELISA or Dot-Blot appear as a more versatile technique applicable to the diagnosis of a large number of samples [
PCR, on the other hand, is a technique with great advantages in fungi identification. It is a rapid method, since the process of extraction and amplification of DNA and electrophoresis can be performed in 24 h, which substantially reduces the diagnosis time as compared to the conventional methods-direct examination of colonies and culture [
In order to provide tools for the detection of Cercospora species in soybean plants at an early stage in laboratories with high or low level of complexity, both an immunochemical (Dot-Blot) technique requiring low level of complexity and a molecular (PCR) technique demanding higher complexity laboratories were developed in this work.
The following strains, belonging to NITE Biological Resource Center (Japan) collection, were used in the experience: Cercospora kikuchii NBRC 6711 (CK6711) and Cercospora sojina NBRC 6715 (CS6715), as well as regional isolates of C. kikuchii, which produced cercosporin in high (CK32, 148.51 ± 3.98 nmol∙cyl−1 ±SD) and low (CK15, 3.93 ± 0.39 nmol∙cyl−1 ±SD) concentrations [
Plants at phenological stage V3, experimentally inoculated with CK6711, CS6715, CK15 and CK32, as described in Latorre Rapela et al. [
In order to determine how early the fungus could be detected, different sampling times (4 and 24 h, and 2, 4 and 6 days) were set, since in previous tests, lesions had been visible to the naked eye in plants infected with Cercospora 5 days after inoculation.
The amino acid sequence of CFP has 607 amino acids [
Specific primers -“Forward” (FP: 5̓-gtcctgcccgatgctca-3̓) and “Reverse” (RP: 5̓- tcacactgctttgcccac-3̓)-were designed using the DNA Start Sequence Analysis Software program. These ones were selected between the set of primers suggested by the program taking into account the highest score to amplify nearly all the exon coding region. Primers were synthetized by Genbiotech SRL (Argentina). The selected fragment was ligated firstly to the plasmid vector pGEM-TEasy (Promega®, EE.UU) and then to the expression vector pET-32a (Novagene, EE.UU). Plasmids ligated to PCR amplicon were transformed into Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3).
The recombinant protein obtained was purified in an IDA-Sepharose (Novagen, U.S.A) column, over which Ni2+ was immobilized.
The specific anti-CFP antibodies were obtained from a rabbit immunized with such protein. Immunization was carried out at the Centro de Experimentaciones Biológicas y Bioterio of Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias- Universidad Nacional del Litoral (FCV-UNL).
The extraction of the CFP protein was carried out according to the protocol proposed by Rollins et al. [
Total protein determination was performed following Bradford technique [
For adsorption of nonspecific antibodies, nitrocellulose membrane strips were cut, placed into an Eppendorf tube and embedded with protein extract of the fungus CK15. They were then removed and let dry at room temperature. When dry enough, the membranes were placed into another Eppendorf tube with 1 ml of rabbit serum, stirring for 30 min at room temperature [
The procedure was repeated at least 5 times. Finally the adsorbed serum was collected in another Eppendorf tube, fractionated and kept at −20˚C until use.
The presence of antibodies specific for the native protein of CK6711 in the adsorbed serum was determined by Western blot.
The following procedure was applied to every extract obtained: 1 μl of the pure soluble extract, followed by decreasing amounts (1/2, 1/8, 1/32 and 1/64) of this same extract was placed on a nitrocellulose membrane, so as to fix the antigen (CFP protein) on the membrane in decreasing amounts. Each extract was allowed to dry at room temperature and blocked with PBS (Phosphate Buffered Saline-Tris)-skim milk 5% for 60 min. Afterwards, three 5 min washing cycles with PBS-T were performed. It was then incubated for 1 h in a vial with 1ml of rabbit serum adsorbed (1:500) on 1% PBS-milk, subjected to three new washes and incubated again for 1 h with 1 ml of anti-IgG total rabbit serum conjugated with peroxidase (diluted 1/500 with 1% PBS). After a new three times-washing step, the membranes were treated with a solution of PBS, hydrogen peroxide 0.4% and 3%, 3’-diaminobenzidine (Sigma Chemical Co.) for 20 min. The reaction was stopped by washing with water.
All incubation steps were carried out at moderate stirring. All experiments were carried out in duplicate.
This method was designed to facilitate visual reading while decreasing the subjectivity of observations. The applied principle is the semi quantification of the amount of CFP protein present in the plant extracts, while dots were loaded using decreasing amounts of the extract. As a result, more dots are recognized, more amount of protein is present in the sample. Notwithstanding, a weakness of Dot-Blot method for diagnostic purpose is that different users may interpret a weak signal as positive or negative. Then if the result is expressed based only in the last blot with the minimal signal, the variability of the informed result for a defined sampled might be high between users. To obtain a more accurate visual lecture, the signals for the five dots corresponding to a single sample were registered as high or low and were integrated in a score. Every signal obtained on the membrane was considered to have a numerical basis of 4, 2 or 1, depending on the strength of the signal (very strong, low or light, or not visible, respectively). Then, these signals were integrated in a score by multiplying them together. Indeed, different criteria were tested to determine the best way to integrate the signals and the product showed the best discrimination between positives and negatives samples (data not shown).
Once the score was obtained, a cut-off line was defined through the ROC (Receiver Operating Characteristic) curve with the MedCalc program, in order to obtain the best discrimination between reactive and nonreactive samples. For this purpose, plants with symptoms of Cercospora disease and healthy plants were used. CK6711 was also included as a positive control. The score was considered less than or equal to 2 for healthy plants and greater than or equal to 4 for infected plants, so that the score value equal to or less than 2 was considered as a marker of lack of CFP in the leaf tissue.
The extraction of total DNA from fungus and plant tissue was carried out according to Lee and Taylor [
In a first test, primers FP and RP, previously designed to amplify the coding sequence fragment were used, evaluating different reaction conditions with the DNA of the CK6711 fungus. This technique was carried out with DNA of plants inoculated with the regional isolates CK32 and CK15, using DNA of CK6711 and CS6715 as positive controls.
Then, new primers were designed in order to increase specificity with plant tissues. For this purpose, the alignment and computer analysis of the sequence corresponding to the last exon of the gene, deposited in the GenBank (Accession number AF091042), was made. The program DNA start Sequence Analysis Software was applied, selecting those primers with the highest score (CFP-1: 5̓-tgaggtcgcagagcaagcat-3̓ and CFP-2: 5̓- cgcgtcgtcccattagttttct-3̓), which were then sent for synthesis to Genbiotech SRL.
For each DNA from fungus and plant tissue obtained, amplification reactions were conducted in a total volume of 50 μl, with 20 ng of DNA and 5 μl of reaction buffer 1× (InbioHighway, Argentina), 1.5 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM of each dNTPs (Inbio Highway, Argentina), 0.2 μM of each oligonucleotide and 2.5 U of Taq DNA polymerase (Inbio Highway, Argentina). Mineral oil (15 μl) was added at the end of the reaction.
Amplification was carried out as follows: one 3 min denaturalization cycle at 95˚C; 35 cycles comprising 1 min at 58˚C, 1 min at 72˚C and 1 min at 95˚C, with a final extension cycle of 5 min at 72˚C.
Amplification products were separated by electrophoresis on horizontal submerged agarose gels (1.5% w/v) with TBE 0.5× (Tris-borate 0.089 M , EDTA 0.002 M ) [
All experiments were carried out in duplicate.
The band profile obtained was photographed with Gel Doc XR System (BIORAD-Life Science Cat. # 170 - 8170) using Quantity One Software.
This test was applied to DNA of the plants inoculated with the regional isolates CK32 and CK15, using DNA of CK6711 and CS6715 as positive controls.
The homology between cfp sequence and Cercospora genus species was corroborated (using BLAST program) when seeking for identity in GenBank database. No homology was found with gene sequences of other fungal species indexed so far.
The results of Dot-Blot technique are shown in
The score of each sample is shown in
According to the criterion adopted, the extracts of the reference strains CK6711 and CS6715 showed score values higher than 4, whereas Penicillium sp. extract (negative control) had a value less than 2.
Four days after inoculation, every plant extract inoculated with regional isolate CK32 showed a score 32, which indicated the presence of CFP protein in the leaf tissue. Plants collected 4 and 24 h and 2 days post-in- oculation showed values less than 2, as well as plants treated with sterile water and uninoculated ones.
Score values between 128 and 512 appeared for the positive control, whereas it was 1 for the negative control. As an example, Dot-Blot images applied to extracts of plants infected with CK6711 at different times post-in- oculation are shown (
When separating the amplification products obtained with oligonucleotides FP and RP, the fungus corresponding to the reference strain could be seen to give a clear band at 451 bp, approximately; however, both infected and healthy plants showed nonspecific bands.
Use of oligonucleotides CFP-1 and CFP-2 allowed the amplification of an inner portion of the cfp fragment (about 264 bp). This fragment became visible 4 h after plant inoculation with the reference strains CK6711 and CS6715 and the regional isolate CK32. This signal intensified with time.
No amplification was detected for any of the sampling times in uninoculated plants and plants treated with sterile water. The same response was observed in samples obtained from plants inoculated with CK15, a producer of low concentration of cercosporin.
As an example,
Samplea | Dot-Blot intensity and score calculation | Score | Samplea | Dot-Blot intensity and score calculation | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 × 2 × 2 × 1 × 1 | 8 | 9 | 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 | 1 |
2 | 2 × 2 × 2 × 1 × 1 | 8 | 10 | 2 × 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 | 2 |
3 | 2 × 2 × 2 × 1 × 1 | 8 | 11 | 2 × 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 | 2 |
4 | 2 × 2 × 2 × 1 × 1 | 8 | 12 | 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 | 1 |
5 | 2 × 2 × 2 × 1 × 1 | 8 | 13 | 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 | 1 |
6 | 2 × 2 × 2 × 1 × 1 | 8 | 14 | 2 × 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 | 2 |
7 | 2 × 2 × 2 × 1 × 1 | 8 | 15 | 2 × 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 | 2 |
8 | 4 × 4 × 2 × 1 × 1 | 32 | 16 | 4 × 4 × 4 × 4 × 4 | 1024 |
aSamples 1 - 8: plants with symptoms of the disease; samples 9 - 15: plants without symptoms; Sample 16: Cercospora kikuchii NBRC 6711.
Accurate and early identification of the involved pathogen, as well as disease diagnosis, are crucial requisites for a thorough understanding of plant diseases and appropriate decision-making on the effective measures to be taken for crop management.
Traditional methods for phytopathogen identification in the laboratory have turned out to be slow and vague, which has led to the search for specific, sensitive and fast detection techniques [
Evaluating the use of an immunochemical technique such as Dot-Blot or Dot-ELISA was the aim of this work. For good phytopathogen detection, a nitrocellulose membrane was used as an adsorption surface, since it allows the immobilization of more physicochemical characteristics of the antigens than ELISA plate [
Also, following Lartey et al. [
The adsorption allowed the elimination of nonspecific reactivities, and the incorporation of a score facilitated interpretation of results, thus resulting in an easy, fast and economic technique that could be used in the field as a screening method [
Dot-ELISA can be completed in less than 3 h, allows the simultaneous processing of several samples and, as the interpretation of results is visual, the end point can be easily determined. It is one of the most versatile tests to detect either antigen or antibody and is adaptable to both laboratory and field conditions [
This technique has been used in Colombia to detect the mycotoxin beauvericin [
Dot-Blot technique allowed the CFP protein detection 4 days after experimental inoculation, even when no disease symptoms were visible.
Besides the immunochemical technique, a molecular technique (PCR) was developed for the detection of Cercospora species attacking soybean.
In 1999, Xu et al. [
Lartey et al. [
Results showed that oligonucleotides CFP-1 and CFP-2, designed to amplify an inner portion of cfp fragment, were highly specific of Cercospora species, so they could determine its presence from both DNA extractions of the fungus mycelium developed “in vitro” and plants inoculated with the fungus, even when no disease symptoms were observed. The gen was detected 4 h after experimental inoculation. It is important to point out that when PCR was conducted with plants inoculated with the regional isolate CK15, the 264 bp band corresponding to cfp gene was not detected. It should be remembered that this fungus produced very low concentrations of cercosporin (3.93 ± 0.39 nmol∙cyl−1 ±SD) and hence, small lesions, which could be due to a similar fact reported by Daub et al. [
So far, these methodologies for Cercospora species detection have not been developed somewhere in the world. Chanda et al. [
It is important to point out that in this paper, in both techniques, the two strains used yield coincident results, which is because such species produce cercosporin and its transport protein [
As a conclusion, the above described techniques allowed detection, at early stages, of the Cercospora species involved in two of the most frequent LCD in Argentina, when the cercosporin concentration produced by the fungus was higher than 3.93 ± 0.39 nmol∙cyl−1 ±SD.
However, sensitivity between both techniques was very different, since PCR always allowed detection at early stages of infection, without visible symptoms of the disease. The usefulness of both techniques should be confirmed by further validation with field samples. It has to be considered that this study was performed with the development of an experimental model to infect soy plants with Cercospora. This methodology has allowed reproducing infection symptoms in healthy plant tissues and determining how many hours and days after the inoculation the injuries were visible to the naked eye. This model allowed assessing the previously optimized techniques with high reliability. Unfortunately, a reliable assessment of the method in field crop would be difficult because there is no “gold standard” that allows to know, at early stages, the infection caused by this fungal genus and to determine the time of the crop infection in the field. Then an experimental infection in field crop would be necessary to validate this method.
This work was funded by grants from Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina , CAID 2009. The authors would like to thank Eng. Roxana Maumary for her contribution with plant collection and the experimental pattern of soybean plants infected by Cercospora species.
María GabrielaLatorre Rapela,María CristinaLurá,IvánMarcipar, (2015) Early Detection of Cercospora Species in Soybean Plants: Immunologic and Molecular Methods. American Journal of Plant Sciences,06,2939-2948. doi: 10.4236/ajps.2015.618289