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Microscopy reveals disease control through novel effects on fungal development: a case study with an early-generation benzophenone fungicide
Authors:Schmitt Mark R  Carzaniga Raffaella  Cotter H Van T  O'Connell Richard  Hollomon Derek
Institution:USDA-ARS, Cereal Crops Research Unit, 501 Walnut Street, Madison, WI 53726, USA. markschmitt@wisc.edu
Abstract:The benzophenones are a new class of agricultural fungicides that demonstrate protectant, curative and eradicative/antisporulant activity against powdery mildews. The chemistry is represented in the marketplace by the fungicide metrafenone, recently introduced by BASF and discussed in the following paper. The benzophenones show no evidence of acting by previously identified biochemical mechanisms, nor do they show cross-resistance with existing fungicides. The value of microscopy in elucidating fungicide mode of action is demonstrated through identification of the effects of an early benzophenone, eBZO, on mildew development. eBZO caused profound alterations in the morphology of powdery mildews of both monocotyledons and dicotyledons, affecting multiple stages of fungal development, including spore germination, appressorial formation, penetration, surface hyphal morphology and sporogenesis. Identification of analogous effects of eBZO on sporulation in the model organism Aspergillus nidulans (Eidam) Winter provides a unique opportunity to elucidate important morphogenetic regulatory sites in the economically important obligate pathogens, the powdery mildews. Benzophenones provide a further example of the benefits of whole-organism testing in the search for novel fungicide modes of action.
Keywords:microscopy  mechanism of action  mode of action  powdery mildew  benzophenone  fungicide  Blumeria  Aspergillus
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