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Hiromichi Nitta

Hiroshima Institute of Technology

Publishes on Plant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases, Plant Physiology and Cultivation Studies, Fungal Plant Pathogen Control. 48 papers and 189 citations.

48Publications
189Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

A Reovirus Causes Hypovirulence of <i>Rosellinia necatrix</i>
Satoko Kanematsu, Masaaki Arakawa, Yuri Oikawa et al.|Phytopathology|2004
Cited by 127Open Access

ABSTRACT White root rot, caused by Rosellinia necatrix, is a serious soilborne disease of fruit trees and other woody plants. R. necatrix isolate W370 contains 12 segments of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) that is believed to represent a possible member of the family Reoviridae. W370 was weakly virulent and its hyphal-tip strains became dsRNA free and strongly virulent. The 12 segments of W370dsRNA were transmitted to hygromycin B-resistant strain RT37-1, derived from a dsRNA-free strain of W370 in all or none fashion through hyphal contact with W370. The W370dsRNA-transmitted strains were less virulent than their parent strain RT37-1 on apple seedlings, with mortality ranging between 0 to 16.7% in apple seedlings that were inoculated with the W370dsRNA-containing strains and 50 to 100% for seedlings inoculated with the dsRNA-free strains. Some W370dsRNA-containing strains killed greater than 16.7% of seedlings, but these were found to have lost the dsRNA in planta. These results indicate that W370dsRNA is a hypovirulence factor in R. necatrix. In addition, a strain lost one segment (S8) of W370dsRNA during subculture, and the S8-deficient mutant strain also exhibits hypovirulence in R. necatrix.

A method of inducing fruit core rots in Japanese Pear artificially and effectively
Hiromichi Nitta|Annual Report of The Kansai Plant Protection Society|2006
Cited by 3Open Access

A method was investigated to artificially generate fruit core rot in Japanese pear by injecting a spore suspension through the calyx end of a fruit into the core using a syringe. When a spore suspension of Phomopsis sp. was inoculated using 107 spores per fruit, a heavy type of fruit core rot was effectively generated. On the other hand, when a spore suspension of Colletotricum sp. was inoculated at 105 spores per fruit, a mild type of fruit core rot was effectively generated.