Development of PCR-based detection method for fruit bunch rot (FBR) disease in oil palm / Suhanah Jaabi

Fruit bunch rot (FBR) disease is considered as a new potential emerging disease of oil palm in Malaysia. The occurrence of this disease has been reported in Perak and Selangor states since 2012. The causal pathogen was identified as Marasmius palmivorus Sharples (1928) is known to be as saproph...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jaabi, Suhanah
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/60037/1/60037.pdf
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Summary:Fruit bunch rot (FBR) disease is considered as a new potential emerging disease of oil palm in Malaysia. The occurrence of this disease has been reported in Perak and Selangor states since 2012. The causal pathogen was identified as Marasmius palmivorus Sharples (1928) is known to be as saprophytic apparently become parasitic after it has attained a certain inoculum level of infection. The current study aimed to develop molecular polymerase chain reaction (PCR) detection method for FBR disease in oil palm. The use of molecular diagnostic assay offers specificity and rapid diagnostic for an early disease detection in plantations. Therefore, a total of 39 samples were collected from Perak and Selangor states by random sampling in the oil palm plantations. Basidiocarps and rhizomorphs on diseased oil palm were collected prior surface sterile and 8 pure isolates of M. palmivorus were successfully isolated. The identity was confirmed by morphological and molecular identification. An artificial inoculation of M. palmivorus on detached oil palm fruit using in vitro assay showed positive infection. Ten species-specific primers were designed to amplify the Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS) of ribosomal gene cluster (rDNA) of M. palmivorus. Primers designed in this study were screened for efficiency and specificity before optimized using Gradient PCR for optimum annealing temperature (59 – 64ºC) for PCR amplification. Validation assays performed by cross reaction with 34 different fungi species includes 66 samples from different sources. The results obtained suggests that the new designed primer could be employed to directly analyse sample from the field with the aim of detecting the presence of the pathogen in diseased fruits. Molecular analyses suggested that primer pair MP02 was able to amplify M. palmivorus at 64 ºC annealing temperature in 30 cycles of PCR programme. This report for the first time that species specific primer MP02 has revealed to be useful primer in PCR amplification for the detection of M. palmivorus rDNA.