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Journal ArticleOpen Access

Cautionary Notes on Use of the MoT3 Diagnostic Assay for <i>Magnaporthe oryzae</i> Wheat and Rice Blast Isolates

Author Affiliations
Gazipur Agricultural University, Norwich Research Park, Sainsbury Laboratory, University of Exeter, ...
Published InPhytopathology
Year2018
Citations33

Abstract

The blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae is comprised of lineages that exhibit varying degrees of specificity on about 50 grass hosts, including rice, wheat, and barley. Reliable diagnostic tools are essential given that the pathogen has a propensity to jump to new hosts and spread to new geographic regions. Of particular concern is wheat blast, which has suddenly appeared in Bangladesh in 2016 before spreading to neighboring India. In these Asian countries, wheat blast strains are now co-occurring with the destructive rice blast pathogen raising the possibility of genetic exchange between these destructive pathogens. We assessed the recently described MoT3 diagnostic assay and found that it did not distinguish between wheat and rice blast isolates from Bangladesh. The assay is based…
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