Research

Plant pathology professors receive $1.2 million to study, catalog Fusarium fungi

Fusarium species have broad relevance in medical and scientific research, agriculture, safety and quality of foods, and urban and rural development. Some can cause disease in plants, animals and humans and produce toxins that can contaminate food. A 2011 study led by Geiser examined the prevalence of common types of Fusarium in bathroom sink drains and found that plumbing systems may be a common source of human infections. Credit: Penn State. Creative Commons

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — David Geiser and Seogchan Kang, professors of plant pathology and environmental biology in Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences, received a grant from the National Science Foundation to perform the first new synthesis of taxonomy for species of the genus Fusarium in the past 30 years.

Fusarium species have broad relevance in medical and scientific research, agriculture, safety and quality of foods, and urban and rural development. Some can cause disease in plants, animals and humans and produce toxins that can contaminate food. A 2011 study led by Geiser, for example, examined the prevalence of common types of Fusarium in bathroom sink drains and found that plumbing systems may be a common source of human infections.

The genus represents several hundred species, each of which can affect plants and animals in different ways, or not at all. One species may cause blight on wheat and barley, a potentially billion-dollar problem for the industry, while another species may be used as a biological control to inhibit the growth of pathogenic microbes safely and affordably. Due to their vast diversity, varied characteristics and difficulties in differentiating them, providing effective means for accurate identification of Fusarium species is beneficial for public health, business and industry.

“Despite their importance and ubiquity, the genus is in need of a complete taxonomic revision, in which only about half of the approximately 300 species we know about even have names,” said Geiser. “Currently, researchers, disease diagnosticians and citizens who have important questions about Fusarium are not able to get satisfying taxonomic answers.”

Geiser and Kang’s project will produce a new monograph — a detailed and comprehensive work of writing on a single topic — of the Fusarium genus. The monograph will provide a complete description of all currently known species and utilize new and existing gene sequence data as molecular fingerprints. It also will include introductory chapters that summarize the biological and ecological diversity of the genus.

A key feature of the monograph will be digital connectivity. It will contain hyperlinks to two key Fusarium-specific resources — Fusarium isolates in major culture, and databases of DNA sequence data with a FUSARIUM-ID sequence-based classification tool. Isolates are living specimens and can be obtained by scientists for study in laboratories, greenhouses and other environments. Connecting the monograph to DNA sequence data will allow for more accurate and widely available genetic identification for researchers, agricultural and medical professionals, or anyone working with Fusarium.

“Because plant diseases have worldwide impact, the importance of pooling such resources in a globally accessible format is essential in plant pathology,” explained Kang. “This is why we invested in building this and other online platforms.”

In addition to these two resources, the monograph will enable connections with other digital resources that can be used to catalog and research biological diversity, such as Encyclopedia of Life and Wikipedia. The goal of the project is to facilitate the discovery and recognition of new species of Fusarium, even in well-studied environments such as soils and plants.

The project is international in scope, with participants at USDA’s Agricultural Research Service; the National Agriculture and Food Research Organization in Tsukuba Science City, Ibaraki, Japan; Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, in Ottawa; and the Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute in Utrecht, Netherlands, with other international participants anticipated to join in the future. The project will train two doctoral students and a postdoctoral scholar, broaden the training of the primary investigators and facilitate global collaborations between diverse scientists.

Travel to Amsterdam to plan the project proposal was provided by the James F. and Marilyn L. Tammen Memorial Endowment for International Plant Pathology. James F. Tammen was one of the founding members of the Department of Plant Pathology, serving as the first department head from 1963-1976. He strongly advocated student professional development through international experiences. The endowment supports international education and research opportunities for faculty and students in the department.

In parallel with the monograph, Geiser and Kang’s team will develop a guide, "Fusarium Basics," for the many individuals who use morphology for identification. Individual species descriptions will be arranged based on evolutionary relationships and will include morphological, ecological and other information. It also will include links to lists of isolates that are available and associated data.

Geiser and Kang maintain the Fusarium database, an online collection of data, materials and knowledge from diverse areas of Fusarium research, including genomics, phylogenetics, population genetics and epidemiology in a format that can be easily accessed and updated. The pair created the database in 2004.

Geiser is director of the Fusarium Research Center at Penn State. His research focuses on evolutionary genetics of pathogenic and toxic fungi, in particular Fusarium and Aspergillus; fungal genetics, systematics and evolution; and plant and animal pathogens.

Kang has expertise in fungal biology and bioinformatics. His work explores fungal genetics and genomics, microbial chemical ecology and molecular diagnosis of plant pathogens. He also maintains an online database for the plant pathogen Phytophthora, as well as one for the plant pathogen Verticillium. In 2017, he was elected as a Fellow of the American Phytopathological Society.

Last Updated August 2, 2017

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