Eutypa lata, the causal agent of dieback in red currant (Ribes rubrum) and gooseberry (R. uva-crispa) in the Netherlands

2011 ◽  
Vol 131 (3) ◽  
pp. 441-449 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel Wenneker ◽  
Marcel M. J. P. van Raak ◽  
Ilse R. van Brouwershaven ◽  
Wendy Martin ◽  
Linda F. F. Kox
2012 ◽  
pp. 225-229
Author(s):  
M. Wenneker ◽  
P.A.H. van der Steeg ◽  
P. Vink ◽  
I.R. van Brouwershaven ◽  
M.M.J.P. van Raak

Plant Disease ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (8) ◽  
pp. 832-838 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josef Špak ◽  
Darina Kubelková ◽  
Jaroslava Přibylová ◽  
Vlastimila Špaková ◽  
Karel Petrzik

To determine the roles of phytoplasmas and Blackcurrant reversion virus (BRV) in the etiology of full blossom disease (FBD), we conducted graft and dodder transmission experiments. Scions from FBD-affected Ribes rubrum were grafted onto red currants, white currants, and black currants. Red and white cultivars revealed symptoms of FBD, whereas blackcurrant displayed symptoms of BRV. No differences in symptoms were observed between plants infected with BRV only and those infected with BRV and phytoplasma. Aster yellows phytoplasma subgroup 16SrI-C was transferred from FBD-infected red currants to periwinkle, where symptoms of green and yellow petal were observed. Back-transmission of phytoplasma to currant seedlings of red and black currant was not successful. Scions of periwinkle infected with aster yellows phytoplasmas of subgroup 16SrI-C and 16SrI-B, which were bottle-, bark-, and approach-grafted onto seedlings of red and black currant, resulted in positive but symptomless transmission of phytoplasma to red currant. We conclude that FBD symptoms are induced by BRV rather than by phytoplasma, which was originally described as the causal agent of FBD.


Plant Disease ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 86 (12) ◽  
pp. 1333-1338 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Teifion Jones ◽  
Wendy J. McGavin

Within 5 years of mechanically inoculating blackcurrant cultivars with partially purified preparations of particles of Blackcurrant reversion virus (BRV), infected plants developed leaf and flower bud symptoms typical of reversion disease, demonstrating that BRV is the causal agent of this disease. To improve the erratic immunocapture reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) detection of BRV in Ribes plants, various stepwise changes were made to the original protocol. Significant improvement in the reliability and sensitivity of BRV detection was made by extracting RNA from trapped BRV particles using Triton-X 100, the design of new primers with higher annealing temperatures, and the use of ‘Ready-to-go’ RT-PCR beads. These features, combined with other minor changes to the protocol, improved BRV detection in reverted blackcurrant plants from <50% to >90% but the reliability of BRV detection in red currant was always very much less and was possible only using nested PCR that was developed for this purpose.


2006 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 369-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. E. Rolshausen ◽  
N. E. Mahoney ◽  
R. J. Molyneux ◽  
W. D. Gubler

Eutypa dieback is a vascular disease of several cultivated crops and trees worldwide. The attribution of the name to the agent responsible for branch dieback is ambiguous. Pathogenicity of Eutypa sp. first was reported on apricot and the causal agent was named E. armeniacae. However, no morphological differences were reported with the previously described E. lata, and some authors considered both species synonymous. Others regarded them as distinct species on the basis of pathogenesis and molecular analysis. We further investigated the relatedness of both species by phylogenetic analyses of the internal transcribed spacer region and β-tubulin gene. These analyses included several other taxa placed in the same family (Diatrypaceae), and yielded three groups. The isolates referred to as E. lata in previous work clustered with Diatrype stigma in one group. Isolates of E. armeniacae and E. lata clustered in a second group, supporting the synonymy of these species. The third group included other Eutypa spp. supporting the polyphyletic origin of this genus. Measurements of conidia length and secondary metabolite production of isolates supported the phylogenetic analyses. Secondary metabolites appeared to be a synapomorphic character shared by several taxa including E. lata, E. armeniacae, E. laevata, and E. petrakii var. petrakii.


2016 ◽  
Vol 148 (1) ◽  
pp. 213-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Wenneker ◽  
K. T. K. Pham ◽  
M. E. C. Lemmers ◽  
F. A. de Boer ◽  
P. J. van Leeuwen ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel Wenneker ◽  
Patricia Van Rijswick ◽  
Khanh Pham ◽  
Engelien Kerkhof ◽  
Renske Bos ◽  
...  

Apple (Malus domestica) and pear (Pyrus communis) are important fruit crops in the Netherlands, with total production of 269,000 tons and 402,000 tons in 2018, respectively. In 2018 and 2019 postharvest fruit rots were observed on the apple variety Elstar (one observation) and pear varieties Conference and Doyenné du Comice (multiple observations). The symptoms were found after storage in controlled atmosphere storage facilities on fruits from different orchards across the Netherlands. Disease incidences up to 50% of the stored fruit were observed. The diseased fruits showed circular brown to black spots with irregular and diffuse margins that enlarged rapidly to form distinctive rings, typical of Phytophthora infection. Several Phytophthora species are currently known to cause fruit rot of pome fruit (Sanchez et al. 2019). To isolate the causal agent, small portions of fruit flesh from decayed fruit were excised from the lesion margin and placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA). The plates were incubated at 20°C in the dark, and pure cultures were obtained by transferring hyphal tips on PDA. The colonies were white with petaloid and rosette-shaped patterns. The isolates grown on PDA formed irregularly branched hyphae, produced persistent non-papillate sporangia, usually on unbranched sporangiophores and chlamydospores were produced. The characteristics were similar to those described for Phytophthora chlamydospora Brasier and Hansen sp. nov. (Hansen et al. 2015). The identity of three representative isolates (KP00219, WURR121 and WURR119) from two different pear cultivars (Conference and Doyenné) and one apple cultivar (Elstar), respectively, was confirmed by means of multilocus gene sequencing. Genomic DNA was extracted using the LGC Mag Plant Kit (Berlin, Germany) in combination with the Kingfisher method (Waltham, USA). Sequences of ITS region, COX and EF were amplified and sequenced. The sequences have been deposited in GenBank (Accession Nos. MT125889, MT125891, and MT125890 [ITS], MT153610, MT153612, and MT153611 [COX], MT153613, MT153615, and MT153614 [EF]. MegaBLAST analysis revealed that our ITS, COX and EF sequences matched with 100% identity to Phytophthora chlamydospora isolates in GenBank AF541901 and AF541902 (ITS), JF771548 and JF771549 (COX), JN936005 and JN936006 (EF). In order to perform Koch’s postulates a pathogenicity assay was performed using mycelial plugs of the cultures KP00219, on pear cv. Conference, and WURR119 and WURR121, on apple cv. Elstar and pear cv. Doyenné du Comice. Ten apples and pears per cultivar were disinfected, and wounded using a sterile cork borer in the middle of the fruit surface area. A mycelial plug of a two weeks old fungal culture was then placed onto the fruit. Placement of a PDA plug without fungal growth was used as a control. The fruits were incubated at 18˚C at high relative humidity for 7 days. Symptoms appeared within 3 days on all fruits. Mock-inoculated controls remained symptomless. The fungus was reisolated and confirmed as P. chlamydospora by morphology and sequencing. P. chlamydospora is found in streams and wet soil worldwide, and has only rarely been recovered as a pathogen from ornamental and woody species (Blomquist et al. 2012; Ginetti et al. 2014; Türkölmez et al. 2016). To our knowledge, this is the first report confirming P. chlamydospora as a causal agent of fruit rot of commercially produced apple and pear cultivars in the Netherlands.


1991 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 471-473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia Tey-Rulh ◽  
Isabelle Philippe ◽  
Jean-Marc Renaud ◽  
Georges Tsoupras ◽  
Pascal de Angelis ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cullen Shaffer ◽  
David C Michener ◽  
Nastassia Vlasava ◽  
Marleen Botermans ◽  
John Starre ◽  
...  

Lemoine’s disease of peonies (LDP) is associated with root galls that could lead to stunted growth and reduced flowering. In the quest to identify the causal agent(s) of LDP, two symptomatic plants (cv. Alice Crousse [AC] and Alice Harding [AH]) were sampled in Arkansas in 2019 and sequenced as described (Shaffer et al., 2019). Gentian Kobu-sho-associated virus (GKaV) was present in both plants. The contigs from AH were mapped to the reference sequence of GKaV (AB698918; Kobayashi et al. 2013) yielding 87% of the ~23kb genome, which was completed by Sanger sequencing (Genbank accession no. MW646307) as per Thekke-Veetil et al. (2013). Sample AC was co-infected with cycas necrotic stunt virus (CNSV) and AH with CNSV, citrus leaf blotch virus and lychnis mottle virus. Gentiana triflora -Pall. and G. scabra Bunge plants with Kobu-sho disease symptoms that include galls/tumors on all parts of gentian were also positive for GKaV (Iwadate et al. 2006; Kodama et al. 2004). The striking similarity between symptoms of the two diseases led to the development of a GKaV screening protocol to determine its presence in LPD-affected material. Primers GKaVF 5’-TTAGTGATGAGTGCCTTTTCC-3’ and GKaVR 5’-CTGCCAGTCTTCTTGTGAACC-3’ which amplify a 574 nt region of the virus were used to screen 144 peony leaf samples from the University of Michigan’s Nichols Arboretum collection. Thirty-two (32) plants were stunted whereas 112 displayed normal growth. Nineteen (59%) of the stunted plants tested positive for GKaV compared to eight (6.5%) of the symptomless plants. Partial GKaV genome sequences of three isolates from stunted Michigan plants were deposited in GenBank (MW646310-12) along with three GKaV isolates from Arkansas collected at the same location and time as AC and AH (MW646308-9, MW646313); two had LDP symptoms and the status of the third was unknown. In 2020 four peony root samples from the Netherlands were sequenced as described in Hammond et al. (2021) to identify the causal agent of root galls in three samples. GKaV was present in two: cv. Paul M. Wild and #40391499 and the nearly complete genome sequences were deposited in GenBank (MW916234-5). ‘Paul M. Wild’ was co-infected with cucumber mosaic virus and tobacco rattle virus and #40391499 with a novel amalgavirid. The third symptomatic cv. Many Happy Returns was infected with CNSV while the fourth symptomless cv. Itoh was infected with CNSV and amazon lily mild mottle virus (Shaffer et al., 2021). Percent pairwise identities between sequences were calculated using the SDT Version 1.2 (Muhire et al. 2014). The six partial GKaV sequences from Michigan and Arkansas share 92-100% nt (98-100% aa) identity. Analysis of the three near full length GKaV genomes presented in this communication and the type isolate (NC020252) showed 87-91% nt (93-97% aa) identity. This report provides evidence that GKaV infects peony and is present in Europe and North America. The association of GKaV with LDP is not established, but the virus has been detected in 59% of the plants showing disease symptoms and in ˂7% of asymptomatic plants. We hypothesize that as in the case of Gentian, GKaV has an extended incubation period in peony (Kobayashi et al., 2013) and its titer may fluctuate between seasons as it has been well established for other crops (Villamor et al., 202x). The industry does not perform virus clean-up routinely; propagation material should be tested for GKaV to minimize its spread since the virus may be associated with LDP in at least some cultivars.


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