Pythium periplocum, an aggressive mycoparasite of Botrytis cinerea causing the gray mould disease of grape-vine

FEMS Microbiol Lett. 1999 Dec 15;181(2):277-80. doi: 10.1111/j.1574-6968.1999.tb08855.x.

Abstract

Pythium periplocum Dreschler has been found to be an aggressive mycoparasite of Botrytis cinerea, the causal agent of the gray mould disease of the grape-vine. When grown together, the former enters the latter's mycelium, branches freely within, coagulates its cytoplasm and finally tears its hyphae apart, bringing about widespread destruction of the grape-vine pathogen. Extensive coiling around the host, as reported in the case of other mycoparasites belonging to the genus Pythium, has not been observed here. The infected mycelium of B. cinerea fails to infect the grape-vine and does not induce the characteristic gray mould symptoms. Since P. periplocum is not a grape-vine parasite, it could be useful for the biological control of B. cinerea. A brief account of this mycoparasitism is discussed in this article.

MeSH terms

  • Botrytis*
  • Pythium / pathogenicity*
  • Rosales / microbiology*