Cladosporium Link, Mag. Gesell. naturf. Freunde, Berlin 7: 37 (1816) [1815]
Background
Cladosporium belongs to Cladosporiaceae in the order Capnodiales (Hyde et al. 2013; Liu et al. 2017). Established in 1816 with C. herbarum as type species, Cladosporium is one of the largest genera of dematiaceous hyphomycetes. Davidiella was erected by Braun et al. (2003) to accommodate the sexual morph of Cladosporium sensu stricto. Davidiella was therefore recognized as a synonym of Cladosporium as Cladosporium has priority over Davidiella at generic rank, and is also the more commonly used name in literature (Bensch et al. 2012). Therefore, Cladosporiaceae took preference over Davidiellaceae (Bensch et al. 2012). Cladosporium species have a worldwide distribution and can be easily spread in the environment, because of their small conidia. Cladosporium includes many important pathogens causing leaf spots and stem rots of many plant hosts. For example, Cladosporium fulvum is the causal agent of tomato leaf mold (van Kan et al. 1991). Cladosporium species have been recorded as endophytes and may have a positive effect, for example, C. sphaerospermum was isolated from the roots of Glycine max which can promote its growth (Hamayun et al. 2009). Some species, such as C. herbarum, are also known as common contaminants in clinical laboratories and cause allergic lung disease (de Hoog et al. 2000). Several species were also isolated from human respiratory samples (Sandoval-Denis et al. 2016). Thirteen species are fungicolous (Heuchert et al. 2005; Sun et al. 2019) and have the potential for biological control in agriculture and forestry (Torres et al. 2017).
There have been studies towards understanding the genetic components of Cladosporium. Cladosporium fulvum is an important model species in the plant pathology study. Iakovidis et al. (2020) reported classical mapping strategies for loci of tomato that response to sequence-monomorphic effector Ecp5. Convergent evolution could be used for choosing different functional genes according to individual plant breeding needs. Ge et al. (2019) showed that Cladosporium species have the potential to be used in industrial processes. They identified a new glucose oxidase gene CtgoxB from C. tianshanense and suggested this could be a candidate for the aquatic feed and detergent industries. Transcriptome and proteome analyses of C. fulvuim showed that 14 out of 59 predicted proteases are expressed during in vitro and in planta, of which nine belong to serine proteases and the rest belong to metallo and aspartic proteases (Jashni et al. 2019). This study also confirmed the presence of six proteases at proteome level during the infection.
Grinn-Gofroń et al. (2019) developed and evaluated the models of forecasting possibilities of airborne spore concentrations in 18 sites in six countries across Europe. The study revealed the possibility of reliable prediction of fungal spore levels using gridded meteorological data. They concluded that these forecasting models can be used in the more timely and efficient management of phytopathogenic and of human allergic diseases. An environmentally isolated strain of C. sphaerospoermum substantially enhanced plant growth, early flowering and increase in crop yield after exposure in vitro (Li et al. 2019). Pan et al. (2020) identified four new hybrid polyketides (Cladosin L-O) from C. shaerospermum which showed strong cytotoxicity, antifungal activity and moderate antibacterial activity.
Classification: Ascomycota, Pezizomycotina, Dothideomycetes, Pleosporomycetidae, Capnodiales, Cladosporiaceae
Type species–Cladosporium herbarum (Pers.) Link
Distribution– Worldwide
Disease symptoms–Leaf spots, leaf blight, discolourations, necrosis, or shot-hole symptoms, on stems and fruits, rots
Hosts– Cladosporium species occur on a wide range of host plants including Asparagaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae, Myrtaceae, Orchidaceae, Poaceae, Solanaceae and Vitaceae (Farr and Rossman 2020). Some species can be hyperparasites of insects and fungi (Heuchert et al. 2005; Islam et al. 2019; Sun et al. 2019; Abdel-Baky 2000). These species can cause allergies in humans such as sneezing, hives and also can cause eye, ear and sinus infections (de Hoog et al. 2000).
Pathogen biology, disease cycle and epidemiology
Cladosporium survives in the soil or on plant debris and produce spores during humid weather. Fungal spores germinate under high humidity and cool to warm temperatures. Wind, rain and irrigation splash, workers, tools, and insects readily disseminate spores (Jordan et al. 1990; Lan and Scherm 2003; Liu et al. 2019).
Morphological based identification and diversity
The asexual morph of Cladosporium species is characterized by a unique coronate structure of the conidiogenous loci and conidia, consisting of the central convex dome surrounded by a raised periclinal rim (Bensch et al. 2012; Fig 1), while ascomata of sexual morphs are identical to those of Mycosphaerella (sect. Tassiana) (Braun et al. 2003). Historically, all types of dematiaceous hyphomycetes with amero- to phragmosporous conidia formed in acropetal chains had been assigned to Cladosporium sensu lato, resulting in the complication to resolve a natural classification of Cladosporium. Various mycologists proposed natural genetic circumscriptions of Cladosporium (David 1997; Braun et al. 2003; Aptroot 2006). David (1997) found the unique structure of conidiogenous loci and conidial hila using scanning electron microscopy. Based on the genetic circumscriptions, some cladosporioid groups, such as Fusicladium being non-coronate (Schubert et al. 2003), have been excluded from Cladosporium s. str. Various Cladosporium species have been re-examined based on the new generic concepts (Schubert and Braun 2004, 2005a, b, 2007; Schubert 2005; Schubert et al. 2006; Braun and Schubert 2007; Braun et al. 2008). A polyphasic approach revealed three major species complexes within Cladosporium, viz. C. cladosporioides, C. herbarum and C. sphaerospermum (Schubert et al. 2007; Dugan et al. 2008; Bensch et al. 2010; Bensch et al. 2015). A modern monograph of the genus treated 993 names of Cladosporium sensu lato, of which 169 were recognized in Cladosporium sensu stricto and others remain doubtful (Bensch et al. (2012).