September 22, 2022 report
A possible way to confer TR4 fungus resistance to Cavendish bananas

A team of researchers from Wageningen University, working with colleagues from several institutions in Colombia, has found a possible means to confer TR4 fungus resistance to Cavendish bananas. In their study, published on the open access site PLOS ONE, the group exposed Cavendish banana plants to another fungus and found that doing so made them resistant to TR4.
Prior to the 1920s, most of the bananas available globally were of a variety called Gros Michel. But a strain of Fusarium fungus called TR1 began killing off the banana crops in plantations. Undaunted, plantation owners switched to another banana variety called Cavendish—it was immune to the TR1 fungus, though less tasty. More recently, another strain of Fusarium fungus has appeared—called TR4, it has begun killing Cavendish bananas grown in modern plantations. The fungus has proven to be deadly, leaving many plantations barren. It is also easily transmissible, rapidly moving from one plantation to the next. In response, scientists have been looking for both a replacement variety and a treatment for Cavendish plants that will protect them from TR4. In this new effort, the researchers looked at the latter option.
Members of the team noted that prior research has shown that some plants become temporarily immune to certain types of fungus when exposed to a different kind of fungus—one they can fend off naturally. In this case, they wondered if exposing Cavendish banana plants to TR1 would give them protection against TR4.
To find out, they dug up some sample plants and dipped them in a solution containing TR1 fungus. After drying them, they exposed the plants over different intervals of time to TR4 spores. They found that the approach worked—the plants that had been exposed to TR1 showed significant resistance to TR4 for up to 10 days.
The researchers were not able to explain why the exposure made the plants more resistant, noting that plants do not have the kind of immune cells that remember pathogens—but they are optimistic that improvements to their technique could prove helpful in combating TR4.
More information: Fernando A. GarcÃa-Bastidas et al, Induced resistance to Fusarium wilt of banana caused by Tropical Race 4 in Cavendish cv Grand Naine bananas after challenging with avirulent Fusarium spp., PLOS ONE (2022).
Journal information: PLoS ONE
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