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Rice blast

TeBeest, D.O., C. Guerber and M. Ditmore. 2007. Rice blast. The Plant Health Instructor. DOI: 10.1094/PHI-I-2007-0313-07. Reviewed
2012.

DISEASE: Rice Blast
PATHOGEN: Magnaporthe oryzae (anamorph: Pyricularia oryzae)
HOSTS: Rice (Oryza sativa).
Authors
David O. TeBeest, Claudia Guerber, and Michael Ditmore
University of Arkansas

Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3

Hundreds of millions of people world-wide depend on rice as a staple food ( Figures 1, 2). A
crop failure, for any reason, poses a real threat of starvation. Rice blast, caused by a
fungus, causes lesions (Figure 3) to form on leaves, stems, peduncles, panicles, seeds,
and even roots. So great is the potential threat for crop failure from this disease that it
has been ranked among the most important plant diseases of them all. Other grasses,
including crabgrass, are infected with closely related fungi (Magnaporthe grisea,
Magnaporthe poae, Magnaporthe rhizophila and Magnaporthe salvinii), which cause
nearly identical symptoms on their respective hosts.

Symptoms and Signs


The symptoms of rice blast include lesions that can be found on all parts of the plant,
including leaves, leaf collars, necks, panicles, pedicels, and seeds. A recent report
shows that even roots can become infected. However, the most common and diagnostic
symptom, diamond shaped lesions, of rice blast occur on the leaves, whereas lesions on
the sheaths are relatively rare.
Rice leaves. The symptoms on leaves may vary according to the environmental
conditions, the age of the plant, and the levels of resistance of the host cultivars ( Figure 4).
On susceptible cultivars, lesions may initially appear gray-green and water-soaked with
a darker green border and they expand rapidly to several centimeters in length. On
susceptible cultivars, older lesions often become light tan in color with necrotic borders.
On resistant cultivars, lesions often remain small in size (1-2 mm) and brown to dark
brown in color.
Rice collars. The collar of a rice plant refers to the junction of the leaf and the stem
sheath. Symptoms of infection of the collars consist of a general area of necrosis at the
union of the two tissues (Figure 5). Collar infections can kill the entire leaf and may extend
a few millimeters into and around the sheath. The fungus may produce spores on these
lesions.
Rice necks and panicles. The neck of the rice plant refers to that portion of the stem
that rises above the leaves and supports the seed head or panicle. Necks are often
infected at the node by the rice blast fungus and infection leads to a condition called
rotten neck or neck blast (Figure 6). Infection of the necks can be very destructive, causing
failure of the seeds to fill (a condition called blanking) or causing the entire panicle to fall
over as if rotted. The rice blast fungus can also infect the panicles as the seeds form
(Figure 7). Lesions can be found on the panicle branches, spikes, and spikelets. The
lesions are often gray brown discolorations of the branches of the panicle, and, over
time, the branches may break at the lesion.
Rice seeds. The fungus has often been isolated from the pedicels of the seeds. Seeds
are not produced when pedicels become infected, a condition called blanking.
Symptoms of rice blast on seeds themselves consist of brown spots, blotches ( Figure 8),
and occasionally the classic diamond-shaped lesion often seen on leaves. The process
and the time during which infection of seeds by spores of the pathogen occurs has not
been fully described but recent information shows that the fungus can infect seeds by
infecting the florets as they mature into seeds, and it is believed that this is the main way
seed infection develops.

Figure 4 Figure 5

Figure 6 Figure 7

Figure 8
Pathogen Biology
The fungus that causes rice blast is called Magnaporthe oryzae (formerly Magnaporthe
grisea) (Figure 9). It is an ascomycete because it produces sexual spores (ascospores) in
structures called asci, and is classified in the newly erected family Magnaporthaceae.
The asci are found within specialized structures called perithecia. The mycelium of M.
oryzae is septate and the nuclei within the mycelium and spores of this fungus are
haploid.

Sexual Reproduction
The sexual, or teleomorphic, stage of the rice blast pathogen can be produced in the
laboratory if isolates of opposite mating type are paired, but has not been found in the
field in the United States. As an ascomycete, it produces hyaline, fusiform shaped
(spindle-shaped with tapering ends) ascospores with three septa. The asci are
unitunicate. This fungus is considered to be heterothallic with a bipolar mating system
(mating controlled by two different alleles at a single locus) with additional genes
controlling the sexual cycle. Based on recent phylogenetic, molecular and morphological
data, isolates of the fungus from rice and closely related isolates from other grasses
like Eragrostris curvula, Eleusine coracana, Lolium perenne, and Setaria spp. are
taxonomically described as Magnaporthe oryzae, while isolates from Digitaria
sanguinalis (crabgrass) are distinct and should be described as Magnaporthe grisea.

Asexual Reproduction
The asexual stage of Magnaporthe oryzae is described by the name Pyricularia
oryzae (formerly called P. grisea) and it is the most common spore form of the fungus in
the USA (Figure 10). These spores, called conidia, are produced abundantly on lesions
and in culture on specialized stalks, called conidiophores. The conidia are usually three-
celled, and produced on the apex of a conidiophore. Sporulating colonies on agar plates
may take on a fleecy grayish appearance.
Under favorable conditions, the fungus sporulates in the center of the lesions on
susceptible cultivars (Figure 11). It can also sporulate on seed lesions (Figure 12). It rarely
sporulates on the most resistant cultivars. Spores are produced on infected leaf, collar,
panicle, and seed, on conidiophores that extend beyond lesion surfaces; the
conidiophores and spores en-masse may give the lesions a dusty gray appearance.
Conidia are produced after several hours of high humidity and are easily released or
liberated near mid-day, especially under windy conditions.

Figure 9 Figure 10
Figure 11 Figure 12

The Infection Process


Infection of rice occurs when conidia are deposited on rice tissues, and germinate by
producing a germ tube and an appressorium. The appressorium is a melanized
structure, and from it develops an infection peg which penetrates the tissue. After
penetration, the primary infection hypha grows rapidly and ramifies within susceptible
tissues. Growth within tissues of resistant cultivars is often inhibited.

Disease Cycle and Epidemiology


Plant diseases are often severe during periods of warm temperatures and high moisture.
In the United States, rice is grown in Arkansas, California, Florida, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Missouri, and Texas (Figure 13). In the United States, rice is planted
mechanically (Figure 14) as seed, while in many other countries, rice seedlings are grown
in beds and transplanted manually or by machine. Throughout the world, rice is normally
grown partially submerged in water in paddies, although in some regions rice is grown
as upland rice in much the same way as wheat. Generally, rice blast is favored by
moderate temperatures (24C) and periods of high moisture that are 12 hours or longer,
conditions readily attainable in flooded rice fields.

Figure 13 Figure 14

The overwintering sources of spores that comprise the primary inoculum consist of
grasses, volunteer plants, infested refuse (Figure 15), and infested seed on the soil surface
after mechanical planting (Figure 16). Infested seeds left on the soil surface can readily
produce spores of P. oryzae for more than several weeks after planting, well after
seedlings have emerged (Figure 17). In the greenhouse, the fungus also sporulates on the
dead or dying coleoptiles of plants grown from infected seeds.
Figure 15 Figure 16

Figure 17

Spores produced as the primary inoculum on the overwintering tissues produce the
initial infections on young seedlings when the spores that are deposited on leaves,
germinate and invade leaf tissues. Disease severity is often correlated with the amount
of infested material (Figure 18). For example, in Arkansas, the first visible lesions often
appear approximately 45 to 55 days after planting, but the disease is much more severe
in plots receiving the highest amounts of primary inoculum found on infested seeds.
Lesions on the young seedlings appear within a few days after infection. These
secondary lesions produce more spores and these spores are readily wind disseminated
to nearby healthy leaf tissues. The secondary cycles can be repeated many times during
the growing season, with the potential for very high amounts of disease within the crop.
The number of cycles and the number of spores that are produced on each individual
lesion can be influenced by many factors, including the temperature, rainfall, the depth of
the water in the paddy, the amount of nitrogen used to fertilize the rice, and the level of
genetic resistance in the cultivar that is infected (Figure 19). Generally, the leaf phase of
the disease is most severe when daily temperatures are moderate, and when rice is
over-fertilized, or if it is being grown in flood waters below the recommended depths.
Under these conditions conducive to disease, very high incidences of disease have been
recorded (Figure 19) on susceptible cultivars such as Newbonnet and RT7015 in
comparison to cultivars genetically resistant to the fungus.

Figure 18 Figure 19
The amount of disease at the end of the vegetative phase of the growing season
influences the amount of disease during the reproductive phase. Spores produced near
the end of the growing season may infect the collar of the flag leaf producing symptoms
called collar rot. They may also infect the neck when it emerges from the infected collar
upon which the head will be supported to produce a condition called rotten neck or neck
blast. Yield losses are significantly correlated with the extent of rotten neck. Research
has shown a 0.5% loss in yield for every 1% of rotten neck. Infections of the neck are
generally considered the most deleterious phase of the disease because infection at this
location can reduce seed set on the entire panicle. In addition, the fungus can infect the
panicle, the branches on the panicle, and the peduncles upon which the seeds are
carried on these branches. Finally, new information shows that the seed also can be
infected. Infections of the neck, panicle and branches of the panicle are usually relatively
nondescript grayish discolorations of the tissues.

Disease Management
The successful management of rice blast results from a comprehensive series of
recommendations that employ several different management strategies involving
techniques within each strategy as outlined below.

Figure 20 Figure 21

Cultural strategies to manage this disease include useful techniques that rice producers
are urged to follow. Crop rotation is one simple and effective technique that is highly
recommended simply because it provides a mechanism that separates viable spores in
crop residue (Figure 15) from the newly emerging seedlings. A second technique that rice
producers are urged to consider is to fertilize each of the different cultivars properly.
Overuse of nitrogen fertilizers, as shown above, increases the amount of rice blast in
their fields while often failing to significantly increase yields. A third technique that is
often overlooked or difficult to employ in some fields is maintaining a proper flood level
for the rice to grow (Figure 20). Rice blast is known to be more severe in fields or parts of
fields in which the water in paddies falls below recommended levels. Thus, rice blast is
often severe in fields that were not rotated, are under-irrigated, and are over-fertilized
(Figure 21). Finally, using high quality and disease-free seed is always highly
recommended because infested seeds left on the soil surface provide inoculum from
which epidemics develop.
Genetic resistance is a strategy that has long been the mainstay of successful rice
production in the United States, even though the fungus has shown genetic variability for
virulence. In the United States, many rice cultivars contain genes that confer resistance
to one or more of the individual races of the fungus found regionally, and many also
contain a high level of resistance to the fungus that is conferred by many other genes.
The major difficulty in controlling rice blast with genetic resistance is that there are many
races of the pathogen, and cultivars containing a single gene conferring resistance to a
specific race of the pathogen often become susceptible over time with the development
of new races that can infect plants with that specific resistance gene. For example, a
mutation of an 'avirulence' gene in the blast fungus that produces an elicitor that induced
the expression of resistance in the host with the Pi-ta gene for resistance has led to the
formation of a new race capable of infecting plants that carry that important resistance
gene, simply because the plant did not recognize the new race of the pathogen. In this
way, the new race of the fungus has eluded resistance, which means that the cultivars
containing this important resistance gene are very susceptible to the new race, even
though they remain resistant to the other races of the fungus.

Figure 22 Figure 23

A third strategy that has long been viewed as a last resort for rice blast is the use of
chemical fungicides to control the disease. There are two basic techniques that can be
used to manage diseases with the chemical fungicide strategy. The first technique uses
seed treatments to prevent infection of the seedlings after germination. The second
technique uses fungicides to prevent infection of leaves and panicles during the growing
season by making one or two applications of fungicides to the foliage to protect the
panicles when they are emerging from the boot. This technique attempts to reduce the
incidence of rice blast on the panicle necks and panicles. Both techniques have been
used to manage rice blast but neither one is considered to be highly successful. In
addition, the use of foliar fungicides applied by airplanes ( Figure 24) can be very
expensive.

Figure 24

Managing rice blast requires vigilance and careful integration of many strategies and
techniques learned in all parts of the world by the individual rice producer. A single
mistake can result in crop failure from this one important plant disease.

Significance of the Disease


Figure 25

Rice is the staple food crop for a large part of the human population in the world today.
Rice blast is by far the most important disease of the many diseases that attack rice. It is
found wherever rice is grown, it is always important, and it is always a threat. Failures of
entire rice crops have resulted directly from rice blast epidemics. The challenge for
research continues to be to produce high quality food, in ever-increasing amounts at a
lower costs, all while in the presence of an unforgiving and unrelenting pathogen. All of
the plant disease management strategies and techniques that have been generated
through research have been brought to bear against rice blast, but often with limited
success. Rice blast has never been eliminated from a region in which rice is grown, and
a single change in the way in which rice is grown or in the way resistance genes are
deployed can result in significant disease losses even after years of successful
management. This disease is a model that demonstrates the seriousness, elusiveness,
and longevity of some plant diseases. Rice blast has been widely studied throughout the
world. Many investigators have considered it to be a model disease for the study of
genetics, epidemiology, molecular pathology of host parasite interactions and biology.
Recent advances in understanding the genes that govern the avirulence (resistance)
and virulence (susceptibility) interactions have been made with rice blast, and each
advance has helped us to understand how other plant diseases work. It is also important
to note that the entire genomes of the rice blast fungus and rice have been sequenced
and that M. oryzae is the first plant pathogenic fungus to have its genome sequenced
and released to the public.

Selected References
Bonman, J.M. 1992. Rice Blast. In: Compendium of Rice Diseases. Eds. R.K. Webster
and P.S. Gunnel. American Phytopathological Society Press. St. Paul, Minnesota. USA.
Pages 14-18.
Couch, B.C. and L.M. Kohn. 2002. A multilocus gene genealogy concordant with host
preference indicates segregation of a new species, Magnaporthe oryzae from M. grisea.
Mycologia 94: 683-693.
Howard, R.J. and B. Valent. 1996. Breaking and entering: host penetration by the fungal
rice blast pathogen. Annual Review of Microbiology 50: 491-512.
Jia, Y., S.A. McAdams, G.T. Bryan, H.P. Hershey and B. Valent. 2000. Direct interaction
of resistance gene and avirulence gene product confers rice blast resistance. EMBO
Journal 19: 4004-4014.
Long, D.H., F.N. Lee, and D.O. TeBeest. 2000. Effect of nitrogen fertilizer on disease
progress on susceptible and resistant cultivars. Plant Disease 84: 403-409.
Long, D.H., J.C. Correll, F.N. Lee, and D.O. TeBeest. 2001. Rice blast epidemics
initiated by infested rice grain on the soil surface. Plant Disease 85: 612-616.
Orbach, M.J., L. Farrall, J.A. Sweigard, F.G. Chumley, and B. Valent. 2000. A telomeric
avirulence gene determines efficacy for the rice blast gene Pi-ta. Plant Cell 12: 2019-
2032.
Rossman, A.Y., R. Howard and B. Valent. 1990. Pyricularia grisea, the correct name for
the rice blast disease fungus. Mycologia 82: 509-512.
Zhou, E., Y. Jia, P. Singh, J.C. Correll and F.N. Lee. 2007. Instability of
the Magnaporthe oryzae avirulence gene AVR-Pita alters virulence. Fungal Genetics
and Biology. (In Press).

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