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Dive into the research topics where Mubasher Hussain is active.

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Featured researches published by Mubasher Hussain.


Environmental Microbiology | 2017

Effects of different temperature regimes on survival of Diaphorina citri and its endosymbiotic bacterial communities

Mubasher Hussain; Komivi Senyo Akutse; Keppanan Ravindran; Yongwen Lin; Bamisope Steve Bamisile; Muhammad Qasim; Chandra Kanta Dash; Liande Wang

The Asian citrus psyllid, Diaphorina citri, is a major pest of citrus and vector of citrus greening (huanglongbing) in Asian. In our field-collected psyllid samples, we discovered that Fuzhou (China) and Faisalabad (Pakistan), populations harbored an obligate primary endosymbiont Candidatus Carsonella (gen. nov.) with a single species, Candidatus Carsonella ruddii (sp. nov.) and a secondary endosymbiont, Wolbachia surface proteins (WSP) which are intracellular endosymbionts residing in the bacteriomes. Responses of these symbionts to different temperatures were examined and their host survival assessed. Diagnostic PCR assays showed that the endosymbionts infection rates were not significantly reduced in both D. citri populations after 24 h exposure to cold or heat treatments. Although quantitative PCR assays showed significant reduction of WSP relative densities at 40°C for 24 h, a substantial decrease occurred as the exposure duration increased beyond 3 days. Under the same temperature regimes, Ca. C. ruddii density was initially less affected during the first exposure day, but rapidly reduced at 3-5 days compared to WSP. However, the mortality of the psyllids increased rapidly as exposure time to heat treatment increased. The responses of the two symbionts to unfavorable temperature regimes highlight the complex host-symbionts interactions between D. citri and its associated endosymbionts.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Volatiles from Plants Induced by Multiple Aphid Attacks Promote Conidial Performance of Lecanicillium lecanii.

Yongwen Lin; Mubasher Hussain; Pasco B. Avery; Muhammad Qasim; Dalin Fang; Liande Wang

Herbivore-induced plant volatiles (HIPVs) are clues that help predatory insects search for food. The hypothesis that entomopathogenic fungi, which protect plants, benefit from the release of HIPVs was tested. The plant Arabidopsis thaliana was used as the source of HIPVs. The insect herbivore Lipaphis erysimi (Kaltenbach) was used as the inducer, and the fungal pathogen of the aphid Lecanicillium lecanii was exposed to HIPVs to test our hypothesis. When exposed to aphid-induced A. thaliana volatiles, the mortality of aphids pre-treated with a conidial suspension of L. lecanii, the conidial germination and the appressorial formation were significantly increased compared with the control. The decan-3-ol and 4-methylpentyl isothiocyanate that were detected in the headspace seemed to have positive and negative affection, respectively. Moreover, HIPVs generated from groups of eight aphids per plant promoted significantly increased conidial germination and appressorial formation compared with HIPVs from groups of one, two and four aphids per plant. Our results demonstrated that the pathogenicity of the entomopathogenic fungus L. lecanii was enhanced when exposed to HIPVs and that the HIPVs were affected by the number of insect herbivores that induced them.


Molecules | 2018

Exogenous Melatonin Mitigates Acid Rain Stress to Tomato Plants through Modulation of Leaf Ultrastructure, Photosynthesis and Antioxidant Potential

Biswojit Debnath; Mubasher Hussain; Muhammad Irshad; Sangeeta Mitra; Min Li; Shuang Liu; Dongliang Qiu

Acid rain (AR) is a serious global environmental issue causing physio-morphological changes in plants. Melatonin, as an indoleamine molecule, has been known to mediate many physiological processes in plants under different kinds of environmental stress. However, the role of melatonin in acid rain stress tolerance remains inexpressible. This study investigated the possible role of melatonin on different physiological responses involving reactive oxygen species (ROS) metabolism in tomato plants under simulated acid rain (SAR) stress. SAR stress caused the inhibition of growth, damaged the grana lamella of the chloroplast, photosynthesis, and increased accumulation of ROS and lipid peroxidation in tomato plants. To cope the detrimental effect of SAR stress, plants under SAR condition had increased both enzymatic and nonenzymatic antioxidant substances compared with control plants. But such an increase in the antioxidant activities were incapable of inhibiting the destructive effect of SAR stress. Meanwhile, melatonin treatment increased SAR-stress tolerance by repairing the grana lamella of the chloroplast, improving photosynthesis and antioxidant activities compared with those in SAR-stressed plants. However, these possible effects of melatonin are dependent on concentration. Moreover, our study suggests that 100-μM melatonin treatment improved the SAR-stress tolerance by increasing photosynthesis and ROS scavenging antioxidant activities in tomato plants.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology C-toxicology & Pharmacology | 2018

Investigation and molecular docking studies of Bassianolide from Lecanicillium lecanii against Plutella xylostella (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae)

Keppanan Ravindran; S. Sivaramakrishnan; Mubasher Hussain; Chandra Kanta Dash; Bamisope Steve Bamisile; Muhammad Qasim; Wang Liande

Entomopathogenic fungi are rich sources of bioactive secondary metabolites that possess insecticidal properties. The present study reported a novel approach for the identification of insecticidal compounds produced by Lecanicillium lecanii 09 and to assess their toxicity against the diamondback moth Plutella xylostella L. The cyclic peptides groups of toxic substances were separated from L. lecanii 09 through submerged liquid state fermentation. The most abundant toxic metabolite, Bassianolide was purified by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and its molecular weight and purity were determined by Liquid chromatography - mass spectroscopy (LC-MS), Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), and H1 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) respectively. Subsequently, the toxicity of bassianolide was tested against third instar larvae of P. xylostella at three different concentrations (0.01, 0.1, 0.5 mg/ml). The results showed that higher concentration of 0.5 mg/ml had significant maximum mortality at 120 hour post inoculation. Furthermore, we investigated the ligand-target interaction of secondary metabolite binding with target insect immune receptor proteins and predicted the role of toxicity against insect host. This is the first study to report the infection process and the interaction of fungal mediated cyclicdepsipeptide compound (bassianolide) from L. lecanii 09 against the insect host P. xylostella. This novel approach provides a potential impact on biological control using natural toxic compound which acts as good inhibitor on pest insect and prevents toxicity hazards, pollution as well as ecocidal effects killing several beneficial insects.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

Diaphorina citri Induces Huanglongbing-Infected Citrus Plant Volatiles to Repel and Reduce the Performance of Propylaea japonica

Yongwen Lin; Sheng Lin; Komivi Senyo Akutse; Mubasher Hussain; Liande Wang

Transmission of plant pathogens through insect vectors is a complex biological process involving interactions between the host plants, insects, and pathogens. Simultaneous impact of the insect damage and pathogenic bacteria in infected host plants induce volatiles that modify not only the behavior of its insect vector but also of their natural enemies, such as parasitoid wasps. Therefore, it is essential to understand how insects such as the predator ladybird beetle responds to volatiles emitted from a host plant and how the disease transmission alters the interactions between predators, vector, pathogens, and plants. In this study, we investigated the response of Propylaea japonica to volatiles from citrus plants damaged by Diaphorina citri and Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus through olfactometer bioassays. Synthetic chemical blends were also used to determine the active compounds in the plant volatile. The results showed that volatiles emitted by healthy plants attracted more P. japonica than other treatments, due to the presence of high quantities of D-limonene and beta-ocimene, and the lack of methyl salicylate. When using synthetic chemicals in the olfactory tests, we found that D-limonene attracted P. japonica while methyl salicylate repelled the predator. However, beta-ocimene attracted the insects at lower concentrations but repelled them at higher concentrations. These results indicate that P. japonica could not efficiently search for its host by using volatile cues emitted from psyllids- and Las bacteria-infected citrus plants.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2018

Phylogenetic relationship and genetic diversity of citrus psyllid populations from China and Pakistan and their associated Candidatus bacterium

Muhammad Qasim; Wang Baohua; Huasong Zou; Yongwen Lin; Chandra Kanta Dash; Bamisope Steve Bamisile; Mubasher Hussain; Zhao Zhiwen; Liande Wang

Asian citrus psyllid (ACP), Diaphorina citri Kuwayama (Hemiptera: Liviidae), is a severely devastating pest of Rutaceae plants, mainly citrus, across the globe, and causal agent of Huanglongbing (HLB) disease. To find out the genetic relationship and diversity among the populations of ACP and associated Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus (CLas) from two countries (China and Pakistan), sequence data of three different genes, cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI), Cu-transporting protein (ATOX1) and 16S rRNA, were used to characterize all populations. In the present study, MEGA-7 and statistical parsimony software (TCS-1.2) were used to depict the phylogenetic relationship among all populations under both genes, whereas diversity was calculated by DnaSP v5. All analyses were done for country wise and overall relationship among all populations. For ACP populations, both genes presented a significant strong intermingled relationship among all populations and put all population into a single haplotype (Dcit-2), which proved similarity between Chinese and Pakistani populations. Moreover, for CLas strains, 16S gene also presented strong relationship for all sampled populations. All three genes of ACP and CLas populations elucidated more than 95% resemblance to each other. On the other hand, a significant genetic variation was observed by three genes for overall populations, although, country wise variation was non-significant between all collected populations. ATOX1 gene presented higher diversity through Fus Fs test (π = 0.01081, p < 0.003) whereas COI gene gave less diversity under Fus Fs and Tajimas D test (π = 0.00512, p < 0.000 and 0.05, respectively). Similarly, nucleotide mismatch distribution also had shown enough genetic variation among all ACP populations, under both genes. Our sequence data for both genes proved the invasion of the Chinese ACP population (Dcit-2) into Pakistan, through all phylogenetic relationship, which proved a similar genetic makeup among all ACP populations from both countries. Therefore, these results can be helpful to utilize any novel designed control measure equally for both countries.


MicrobiologyOpen | 2018

Susceptibilities of Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus-infected and noninfected Diaphorina citri to entomopathogenic fungi and their detoxification enzyme activities under different temperatures

Mubasher Hussain; Komivi Senyo Akutse; Yongwen Lin; Shiman Chen; Wei Huang; Jinguan Zhang; Atif Idrees; Dongliang Qiu; Liande Wang

Some entomopathogenic fungi species, Isaria fumosorosea, and Hirsutella citriformis were found to be efficient against the Asian citrus psyllid, Diaphorina citri Kuwayama (Hemiptera: Liviidae). However, the susceptibility to these fungi increases when the psyllid infected with Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus (Las), which is transmitted by D. citri and causes citrus greening disease. In this study, we examined the Las‐infected and Las‐uninfected D. citri susceptibility to entomopathogenic fungi at different temperature regimes (5–40°C). When D. citri adults exposed to cold temperature (5°C), they showed less susceptibility to entomopathogenic fungi as compared with control (27°C). Irrespective of infection with Las, a significantly positive correlation was observed between temperature and percentage mortality caused by different isolates of I. fumosorosea, 3A Ifr, 5F Ifr, PS Ifr, and H. citriformis isolates, HC3D and 2H. In contrast, a significantly negative correlation was found between temperature and percentage mortality for 3A Ifr for both Las‐infected and Las‐uninfected psyllids. Detoxification enzymes, Glutathione S‐transferase levels in D. citri showed a negative correlation, whereas cytochrome P450 and general esterase levels were not correlated with changes in temperature. These findings revealed that detoxification enzymes and general esterase levels are not correlated with altered susceptibility to entomopathogenic fungi at the different temperature regimes. Conclusively, temperature fluctuations tested appear to be a significant factor impacting the management strategies of D. citri using entomopathogenic fungi.


Microbial Pathogenesis | 2018

Isolation and characterization of Metarhizium anisopliae TK29 and its mycoinsecticide effects against subterranean termite Coptotermes formosanus

Ravindran Keppanan; Sivaramakrishnan Sivaperumal; Luis Carlos Ramos Aguila; Mubasher Hussain; Bamisope Steve Bamisile; Chandra Kanta Dash; Liande Wang

The entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium anisopliae is widely used as biocontrol agent against many insect pests. In the present study, the potential isolate of M. anisopliae TK29 was isolated from the agricultural soils in Thekkady, India. The taxonomic identity of the isolate was confirmed based on its morphology and 18S rDNA gene sequence homology. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed that the isolated strains were related to the same species. A potential isolate (TK29) was optimized for mass cultivation and conidial spore production was enhanced using three different raw substrates (Rice, Maize, black gram) by solid-state fermentation. The results showed higher conidial spore yield from rice (2.6 ± 0.32%) compared to black gram (2.1 ± 0.28%) and maize (1.9 ± 0.23%) substrates. Dry green conidia were applied against Formosan subterranean termite, Coptotermes formosanus at three different concentrations (1 × 106, 1 × 107, and 1 × 108 conidia/ml-1). The highest mortality rate was obtained from 1 × 108 conidia/ml-1 at 120 h post-treatment. Our study indicated that M. anisopliae TK29 had desirable attributes for the development of a mycoinsecticide against C. formosanus.


Molecules | 2018

Exogenous Melatonin Improves Fruit Quality Features, Health Promoting Antioxidant Compounds and Yield Traits in Tomato Fruits under Acid Rain Stress

Biswojit Debnath; Mubasher Hussain; Min Li; Xiaocao Lu; Yueting Sun; Dongliang Qiu

Acid rain is a serious worldwide environmental problem which reduces the growth and yield of crops. Melatonin, as a pleiotropic molecule has been known to improve stress tolerance by limiting the oxidative damage of plants exposed to adverse environments. However, the role of exogenous melatonin particularly on the yield and antioxidant compounds in tomato fruits under abiotic stress condition remains inexpressible. This observation aims to identify the influence of melatonin treatment under simulated acid rain (SAR) condition on fruit qualities, phenolics, flavonoids, and carotenoids concentration in fruits, and yield of tomatoes. Our study results showed that the fruits of SAR-stressed plants had higher quality traits and antioxidant bioactive compounds by increasing antioxidant activities against SAR-induced oxidative stress compared with fruits of control plants. Nonetheless, these improvements to antioxidant activities in fruits under SAR-condition remained unable to prevent the reduction of the yield. However, SAR-stressed plants treated by melatonin exhibited upgradation on the fruit quality traits, antioxidant compounds and yield attributes through accelerating oxidant-scavenging antioxidant actions in fruits compared with fruits of SAR-stressed plants. Meanwhile, our results suggest that exogenous melatonin plays an important role in improvement of bioactive compounds and yield traits in tomato fruits through regulating antioxidant system.


Microbiological Research | 2018

Prospects of endophytic fungal entomopathogens as biocontrol and plant growth promoting agents: An insight on how artificial inoculation methods affect endophytic colonization of host plants

Bamisope Steve Bamisile; Chandra Kanta Dash; Komivi Senyo Akutse; Ravindran Keppanan; Oluwatoyin Grace Afolabi; Mubasher Hussain; Muhammad Qasim; Liande Wang

Entomopathogenic fungi (EPF) can be established as endophytes in the host plants to offer a long-term preventive measure for pests and diseases. This practice serves as a better alternative to the common practice of periodic direct application of EPF on plants or the target pests as a short-term defense strategy against pests and diseases. These fungal endophytes, aside from their role in pests and diseases prevention, also act as plant growth promoters. Several fungal endophytes have been associated with improvement in plant height, dry and wet weight and other growth parameters. However, many limiting factors have been identified as mitigating the successful colonization of the host plants by EPF. The inoculation methods used have been identified as one, but sadly, this has received little or less attention. Some previous studies carried out comparison between various artificial inoculation methods; foliar application, seedling dipping, soil drenching, seed inoculation, direct injection and others. In separate studies, some authors had suggested different application methods that are best suitable for certain fungal entomopathogens. For instance, leaf inoculation with conidial suspensions was suggested to be the best inoculation method for Beauveria bassiana in sorghum, stem injection was suggested as the most suitable for coffee, while, root dipping method proved the most successful for B. bassiana colonization of tomato plants for the management of Helicoverpa armigera. Here, we discussed entomopathogenic fungal endophytes as bio-control agents, plant growth promoters and highlighted the effect of various artificial inoculation methods on their endophytic colonization of the host plants.

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Liande Wang

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

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Bamisope Steve Bamisile

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

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Chandra Kanta Dash

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

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Yongwen Lin

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

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Muhammad Qasim

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

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Muhammad Qasim

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

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Dongliang Qiu

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

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Komivi Senyo Akutse

International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology

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