Agrostis castellana is common in semiarid natural grasslands of the province of Salamanca, Spain. In this area, plants showing fungal stromata in their stems were observed in July of 2001. These symptoms are typical of choke disease, caused by Epichloë species in several grasses (3). In this disease, external fungal stromata develop around the leaf sheath of the flag leaf during the reproductive cycle of the plant host. As a result, the inflorescence does not emerge. In natural populations of A. castellana, less than 1% of plants showed disease symptoms, and all the stems of infected plants were sterilized by stromata. Intercellular endophytic mycelium was observed by microscopy in stem pith of diseased plants, but not on samples of 30 apparently healthy plants (1). Ergovaline, a fungal alkaloid, was not detected in lyophilized samples of infected plant tissue (2). In a fungal culture obtained from surface-disinfected leaf sheaths of a diseased plant (1), reniform conidia and conidiophores characteristic of the genus Epichloë were observed (4). To determine the fungal species, the nucleotide sequence of the ITS1-5.8SrRNA-ITS2 region and the three first introns of the beta-tubulin gene were obtained (EMBL Accession Nos. AJ490938 and AJ490939). When compared to those of other Epichloë species, these sequences identified the fungus from A. castellana as E. baconii (3). This fungus has been previously described as a pathogenic fungal endophyte in other Agrostis and Calamagrostis species (3,4). The fact that all stems of infected plants were diseased, infection incidence was low, and no alkaloids were detected in plants suggests that this grass-endophyte interaction is pathogenic and not mixed or mutualistic.
References: (1) E. Clark et al. J. Microbiol. Methods 1:149, 1983. (2) N. Hill et al. Crop Sci. 33:331, 1993. (3) A. Leuchtmann et al. Mycol. Res. 102:1169, 1998. (4) J. White Jr. Mycologia 85:444, 1993