scholarly journals First Report of Leaf Spot of Dracaena reflexa Caused by Burkholderia gladioli Worldwide

Plant Disease ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 94 (6) ◽  
pp. 781-781
Author(s):  
M. K. Romberg ◽  
R. L. Griffin ◽  
S. Murugan ◽  
B. D. Quinn ◽  
B. J. R. Alexander

In December 2008 (austral summer), a new disease of Dracaena reflexa Lam. cv. Anita was observed in a postentry quarantine greenhouse near Auckland, New Zealand on plants imported from Costa Rica. Symptoms included rust-colored, water-soaked lesions with chlorotic margins approximately 5 by 10 mm. When the disease was first noticed, incidence approached 80%, but subsequent reduction in greenhouse temperature dramatically reduced symptom expression and lesions were only visible on some leaf tips. Bacteria consistently isolated from the lesions on King's medium B (KB) were cream-colored, shiny, and produced a yellow, diffusible, nonfluorescent pigment. All isolates were able to rot onion slices. On the basis of BIOLOG (Hayward, CA) carbon utilization profiles, isolates were initially identified as Burkholderia gladioli (Severini 1913) Yabuuchi et al. 1993 with a probability index of 100% and a similarity index of 0.85. For molecular identification, a near full-length sequence of the 16S rDNA gene was amplified from all isolates using primers fD2 and rP1 (1), obtaining a PCR product of approximately 1,500 bp. The nucleotide sequences were 100% identical to a number of B. gladioli GenBank entries, including Accession Nos. EF193645 and EF088209. To confirm pathogenicity, three isolates (two isolated prior to greenhouse temperature reduction and one after) were used. Three D. reflexa plants were inoculated per bacterial isolate by wounding three young fully expanded leaves on each plant (four wounds per leaf) and spraying the leaves with a bacterial suspension in sterile distilled water at 108 CFU/ml. At the same time, Gladiolus nanus plants were inoculated in a similar manner. Control plants (D. reflexa and G. nanus) were wounded and sprayed with sterile distilled water. All inoculated plants were covered with plastic bags to maintain humidity and placed in a growth chamber at 25°C. At 3 days, all inoculated plants began to show water soaking and reddish coloration around the inoculation sites, and by 7 days, the lesions had expanded to resemble natural infection. Bacteria isolated on KB from the leading edge of each lesion were morphologically identical to the initial isolates. No bacteria were recovered from the wound sites on the control plants. The 16S rDNA sequences of selected isolates from inoculated plants showed 100% identity to the sequences of the initial isolates, thereby fulfilling Koch's postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of B. gladioli causing leaf spot of D. reflexa in the world. Reference: (1) W. G. Weisburg et al. J. Bacteriol. 173:697, 1991.

Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (10) ◽  
pp. 1425-1425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. L. Li ◽  
Z. Zhou ◽  
Y. C. Yuan ◽  
J. R. Ye

Radermachera sinica is widely planted as an ornamental plant in homes, offices, and malls in China. A leaf spot of R. sinica occurred in Luoyang, China, from 2013 to 2014. Lesions mostly occurred in wounds and were irregular with light brown centers and purple borders. One or more lesions on a leaf sometimes covered the entire blade. Eighty plants were surveyed in Luoyang, with disease incidence of 17%. Five millimeter pieces from the borders of lesions were surface-disinfected with 75% ethanol for 30 s, 1% sodium hypochlorite for 5 min, washed three times in sterilized distilled water, placed on nutrient agar (NA) medium at 25°C in darkness, and incubated for 24 to 48 h. Four white, round, smooth, and shiny colonies were selected for further identification. All strains were gram-positive, aerobic rods with many peritrichous flagella, and could grow in medium containing 5% NaCl. The strains were positive for catalase, starch hydrolysis, liquefaction of gelatin, reduction of nitrate, acid production from glucose, mannitol, maltose, lactose, xylose, and pectinose. The strains were positive for phenylalanine deaminase, decomposition of tyrosine, and utilization of citrate. The strains were identified by biochemical tests as Bacillus megaterium (1). To confirm pathogenicity, the strains were grown on NA for 48 h and suspended in sterile distilled water to produce a suspension with a final concentration of 108 CFU/ml. Healthy leaves of biennial R. sinica plants were sterilized with 75% ethanol and washed three times with sterilized distilled water. Fresh wounds were made with a sterile needle on the healthy leaves. Each of four strains was tested by spray inoculation with a bacterial suspension on three leaves. Sterile distilled water was used as negative control. Plants were enclosed in plastic bags and placed in a growth chamber at 28°C with 80% relative humidity. After 5 days, water-soaked lesions were observed. Two weeks later, lesions 4 mm in diameter turned light brown with purple borders, and most of lesions occurred in puncture wounds. Symptoms similar to those observed on field plants developed on all inoculated leaves, while no symptoms appeared on the control leaves. B. megaterium was re-isolated from the lesions of inoculated leaves, but not from the control leaves. To confirm the bacterial identification, PCR was performed on the 16S rDNA gene with P1/P2 (P1: CAGAGTTTGATCCTGGCT, P2: AGGAGGTGATCCAGCCGCA) (2) and 1,463 bp of the 16S rDNA gene (GenBank Accession No. KJ789369) showed 100% sequence identity to B. megaterium DSM 319 (NC_014103.1). To our knowledge, this is the first report of a leaf spot of R. sinica caused by B. megaterium in China as well as anywhere in the world. References: (1) P. Vos et al. Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology. Vol 3: The Firmicutes. Springer, 2009. (2) W. G. Weisbury et al. J. Bacteriol. 173:697, 1991.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Li ◽  
Yishuo Huang ◽  
Yanxia Shi ◽  
A LI CHAI ◽  
Xuewen Xie ◽  
...  

Coriander (Coriandrum sativum L.) or Chinese parsley is a culinary herb with multiple medicinal effects that are widely used in cooking and traditional medicine. From September to November 2019, symptoms were observed in 2-month-old coriander plants from coriander fields in Lanzhou and Wenzhou, China. The disease developed rapidly under cold and wet climatic conditions, and the infection rate was almost 80% in open coriander fields. Typical symptoms on leaves included small, water-soaked blotches and irregular brown spots surrounding haloes; as the disease progressed, the spots coalesced into necrotic areas. Symptomatic leaf tissue was surface sterilized, macerated in sterile distilled water, and cultured on nutrient agar plates at 28 °C for 48 h (Koike and Bull, 2006). After incubation, six bacterial colonies, which were individually isolated from collected samples from two different areas, were selected for further study. Colonies on NA plate were small, round, raised, white to cream-colored, and had smooth margins. All bacterial isolates were gram-negative, rod-shaped and nonfluorescent on King's B medium. The bacteria were positive for levan production, Tween 80 hydrolysis, and tobacco hypersensitivity but negative for oxidase, potato slice rot test, arginine dihydrolase, ice nucleation activity, indole production and H2S production. The suspension of representative isolate for inoculating of plants was obtained from single colony on King's B medium for 2-3 days at 28 °C. DNA was extracted from bacterial suspensions of YS2003200102 cultured in 20 ml of King’s B medium broth at 28 °C for 1 day. Extraction was performed with a TIANamp Bacterial DNA Kit (TIANGEN, China) according to the manufacturer’s recommendations. The pathogen was confirmed by amplification and sequencing of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase A (gapA) gene, the citrate synthase (gltA) gene, the DNA gyrase B (gyrB) gene and the RNA polymerase sigma factor 70 (rpoD) gene using gapA-For/gapA-Rev, gltA-For/gltA-Rev, gyrB-For/gryB-Rev, rpoD-For/rpoD-Rev primers, respectively (Popović et al., 2019). The sequences of the PCR products were deposited in GenBank with accession numbers MZ681931 (gapA), MZ681932 (gltA), MZ681933 (gyrB), and MZ681934 (rpoD). Phylogenetic analysis of multiple genes (Xu and Miller, 2013) was conducted with the maximum likelihood method using MEGA7. The sequences of our isolates and ten published sequences of P. syringae pv. coriandricola were clustered into one clade with a 100% confidence level. To confirm the pathogenicity of isolate YS2003200102, 2-month-old healthy coriander plants were inoculated by spraying the leaves with a bacterial suspension (108 CFU ml−1) at 28 °C incubation temperature and 70% relative humidity condition, and sterile distilled water was applied as a negative control treatment (Cazorla et al. 2005). Three replicates were conducted for every isolate, and each replicate included 6 coriander plants. After twelve days, only the inoculated leaves with bacterial suspension showed bacterial leaf spot resembling those observed on naturally infected coriander leaves. Cultures re-isolated from symptomatic leaves showed the same morphological characteristics and molecular traits as those initially isolated from infected leaves in the field. This bacterium was previously reported causing leaf spot of coriander in India and Spain (Gupta et al. 2013; Cazorla et al. 2005). To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. syringae pv. coriandricola causing leaf spot disease on coriander in China. Studies are needed on strategies to manage P. syringae pv. coriandricola in crops, because its prevalence may cause yield loss on coriander in China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (5) ◽  
pp. 685-685
Author(s):  
Y. J. Wang ◽  
Y. Y. He ◽  
Z. Xie ◽  
L. Q. Zhang

Soapberry (Sapindus delavayi (Franch.) Radlk.,) plants are widely grown as shade trees in the subtropical to tropical regions of China. In July 2011, large, aerial galls were observed on the above-ground trunks of 5-year-old soapberry plants in two commercial nursery gardens located in Zhejiang Province. Disease incidence was estimated to be 75%. The galls varied in weight from 2 to 24 g and in texture from soft and spongy to hard, and in some cases, the galls completely girdled the trunk. The trees with galls exhibited poor growth compared with healthy trees. Isolations from the grinded and macerated galls yielded nearly pure white, circular, and glistening bacterial colonies on Roy Sauer medium (2). Six random colonies from different galls were selected for bacterial identification, and showed the same morphological, physiological, and biochemical characters and 16S rDNA sequences. All six isolates (isolate SD01 to SD06) were gram negative, rod-shaped bacteria. Carbon source utilization testing with the Biolog GN Bacterial Identification System (version 3.50) confirmed the bacteria as Agrobacterium tumefaciens with a similarity of 0.90. The most-parsimonious tree from the maximum parsimony analysis (PHYLIP package, version 3.68, 500 replicates) of bacterial 16S rDNA gene sequences showed that A. tumefaciens SD01 (GenBank Accession No. JX997939) clustered phylogenetically most closely (99.5% similarity) with A. tumefaciens C58 (AE007870.2). Pathogenicity was confirmed by injecting 3- to 5-week old tomato and sunflower plants and 2-year-old soapberry with approximately 5 μl of the bacterial suspension (108 CFU/ml) in sterile, distilled water. Sterile distilled water was used as a negative control. Ten plants of each treatment were inoculated. Inoculated plants were then transferred to a greenhouse at 25°C. Typical tumors developed at the inoculation sites on tomatoes and sunflower plants 3 weeks after inoculation and on soapberry 6 weeks after inoculation. No symptoms were observed on the control plants. The bacteria that were readily reisolated from the inoculated plants exhibited the same morphological, physiological characters and 16S rDNA sequence as the original culture and were confirmed as A. tumefaciens, fulfilling Koch's postulates. A. tumefaciens is endemic to China and has a very wide host range (1). However, crown gall of soapberry has never been found in China and other countries. To our knowledge, this is the first report of A. tumefaciens on soapberry plants in China. References: (1) M. A. Escobar and A. M. Dandekar. Trends Plant Sci. 8:380, 2003. (2) L. W. Moore et al. Page 17 in: Laboratory Guide for Identification of Plant Pathogenic Bacteria. 3rd ed. N. W. Schaad et al., eds. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN, 2001.


Plant Disease ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 99 (2) ◽  
pp. 281-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Wang ◽  
C. Y. Zeng ◽  
X. R. Chen ◽  
C. D. Yang

Saposhnikovia divaricata (Turcz) Schischk, a perennial plant in the Umbelliferae, is widely cultivated in north China. As a traditional Chinese medicine, it can be used to cure colds and rheumatism (1). During disease surveys on medicinal plants in August 2010, a bacterial leaf blight was discovered with a general incidence of 40 to 60% on S. divaricata farms in Longxi, Weiyuan County in Gansu China. In young plants, tiny yellow-white points were visible on the backs of the leaves. They then expanded to 2- to 3-mm oil-soaked lesions; leaves appeared crimped and deformed. Later the leaves shriveled; black-brown oil-soaked lesions appeared on the vein and the tissue around it; and black streaks appeared on the stems. Ten diseased leaf and stem tissues were cut into 4- to 5-mm squares, surface-sterilized in 1% sodium hypochlorite for 1 min, rinsed three times, and macerated for 5 min in sterilized distilled water. They were then streaked onto nutrient agar (NA) medium and incubated at 28°C for 3 days. Colonies on NA were round, smooth, translucent, and yellowish green. They were Gram negative and induced a hypersensitive response on tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) leaves. The strain was positive for gelatin, catalase, oxidase, and utilization of glucose and saccharose. Pathogenicity tests were performed by spraying bacterial suspension containing 107 CFU/ml on six leaves of three healthy potted S. divaricata plants and injecting it into another six leaves on three plants. Plants inoculated with sterile distilled water alone served as controls. They were placed in a growth chamber at 25°C and bagged for 24 h to maintain >95% humidity. Thirty-six hours after inoculation, the inoculated leaves appeared water-soaked; 10 days later, the symptoms were apparent on leaves and the plant wilted. The negative control appeared normal. Finally, Koch's postulates were verified by re-isolating P. viridiflava from the leaves with typical blight. The genomic DNA of the isolate was extracted, and the partial 16S rDNA sequence was amplified with a universal bacterial primer set (27f and 1492r) (2). The sequence was deposited in GenBank as KM030291. BLAST search yielded 99% identity with P. viridiflava strains, including the strains KNOX209 (AY604847), RMX3.1b (AY574911), ME3.1b (AY574909), and UASWS0038 (AY919300). Based on the symptoms, colony morphology, biochemical tests, and 16S rDNA sequence identity, the pathogen was identified as P. viridiflava. To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf blight of S. divaricata by P. viridiflava in Gansu province of China. In Jilin province, the same disease was reported in 2008 (3). The impact of P. viridiflava on S. divaricata production is not yet known. References: (1) Committee of China Pharmacopoeia. Pharmacop. People's Repub. 1:102, 2005. (2) C. Morenol et al. Microbiology 148:1233, 2002. (3) W. Xue. Dissertation. Jilin Agric. Univ. 1, 2008.


Plant Disease ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 99 (3) ◽  
pp. 416-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Popović ◽  
Ž. Ivanović ◽  
M. Ignjatov ◽  
D. Milošević

During the spring of 2014, a severe leaf spot disease was observed on carrot (Daucus carota), parsley (Petroselinum crispum), and parsnip (Pastinaca sativa) on a 0.5-ha vegetable farm in Vojvodina Province, Serbia. The disease appeared under wet and cool conditions with 5 to 25% of plants infected for each of the three crops. Symptoms were characterized as brown angular leaf spots, ~2 mm in diameter, often limited by veins. Collected symptomatic leaves were rinsed and dried at room temperature, and leaf sections taken from the margin of necrotic tissue were macerated in sterile phosphate buffer and streaked onto nutrient agar with 5% (w/v) sucrose (NAS). After isolation, whitish, circular, dome-shaped, Levan-positive colonies consistently formed. Five strains from each host (carrot, parsley, and parsnip) were used for further study. Strains were gram-negative, aerobic, and positive for catalase and tobacco hypersensitive reaction but negative for oxidase, rot of potato slices, and arginine dihydrolase. These reactions corresponded to LOPAT group Ia, which includes Pseudomonas syringae pathovars (3). Repetitive extragenic palindromic sequence (Rep)-PCR fingerprint profiles using the REP, ERIC, and BOX primers (4) were identical for all strains. Sequence typing of the housekeeping genes gyrB and rpoD (1) was performed for three representative strains (one from each host). Sequences were deposited in the NCBI GenBank database as accessions KM979434 to KM979436 (strains from carrot, parsnip, and parsley, respectively) for the gyrB gene and KM979437 to KM979439 (strains from parsnip, parsley and carrot, respectively) for the rpoD gene. Sequences were compared with pathotype strain Pseudomonas syringae pv. coriandricola ICMP12471 deposited in the Plant Associated and Environmental Microbes Database ( http://genome.ppws.vt.edu/cgi-bin/MLST/home.pl ). BLAST analysis revealed 100% homology for gyrB and 99% homology for rpoD. Pathogenicity was tested with five representative strains from each host on four-week-old plants of carrot (cv. Nantes), parsley (cv. NS Molski), and parsnip (cv. Dugi beli glatki) using two methods: spraying the bacterial suspension (108 CFU ml−1) on the leaves until runoff (5) and injecting the bacterial suspension into leaves with a hypodermic syringe (2). Four plants were used per strain and method. Sterile distilled water was applied as a negative control treatment for each plant species. All plants were kept in a mist room with 100% humidity for 4 h, then transferred to a greenhouse at 25°C and 80% relative humidity and examined for symptom development over a period of three weeks. For all strains, inoculated leaves first developed water-soaked lesions on the leaves 5 to 7 days after inoculation (DAI); 14 DAI lesions became dark brown, often surrounded by haloes. No symptoms were observed on control plants inoculated with sterile distilled water. For fulfillment of Koch's postulates, re-isolations were done onto NAS. Re-isolated bacteria were obtained from each inoculated host and confirmed to be identical to the original isolates using the LOPAT tests and Rep-PCR fingerprinting profiles. Based on the pathogenicity test accompanied by completion of Koch's postulates, sequence analysis, and bacteriological tests, the strains were identified as P. s. pv. coriandricola. To our knowledge, this is the first report of bacterial leaf spot of carrot, parsley, and parsnip in Serbia. It may present a threat to production due to quality requirements for fresh market. References: (1) P. Ferrente and M. Scortichini. Plant Pathol. 59:954, 2010. (2) M. Gupta et al. Plant Dis. 97:418, 2013. (3) R. A. Lelliott et al. J. Appl. Bacteriol. 29:470, 1966. (4) F. J. Louws et al. Appl. Environ. Microb. 60:2286, 1994. (5) X. Xu and S. A. Miller. Plant Dis. 97:988, 2013.


Plant Disease ◽  
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinhua Ding ◽  
Chongchong Lu ◽  
Mingxia Hao ◽  
Lingguang Kong ◽  
Lulu Wang ◽  
...  

Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is the largest grain crop, accounting for about 40 % of the total grain production in China. In mid-July 2021, bacterial leaf streak-like disease emerged in rice varieties Chunyou584 and Yongyou2604 in Linyi city, Shandong Province, China. Disease incidences of the disease ranged from 80% to 90% in the surveyed fields. Infected rice leaves displayed dark green to yellowish-brown water-soaked thin streaks, and a large amount of beaded yellow oozes were observed on the lesions. After drying, there were gelatinous granules that were not easy to fall off and spread between leaf veins (Fig.S1A). According to the field symptoms of this disease, it was preliminarily suspected to be rice bacterial leaf streak caused by Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola (Xoc), which is a guaranteed disease in China. To isolate the causal agent, leaf discs (~1 cm2) of diseased leaves were collected from the margins of the lesions, surface sterilized and ground into pieces in sterile double distilled water. The 10-3, 10-4 and 10-5 dilutions were spread onto peptone sugar agar (PSA) and incubated at 28°C for 36 hours. Yellow mucous bacterial colonies were consistently obtained on PSA medium. To identify the pathogen, fragments of the 16S rDNA, leuS and rpoB were amplified and sequenced using the primers previously reported (Yu et al. 2021). Three strains (LY01, LY02 and LY03) showed identical colony morphology and LY01 was used for further analyses. Sequence analyses showed that the fragments of 16S rDNA (955 bp, GenBank accession number: OK261898), leuS (755 bp, GenBank accession number: OK298387) and rpoB (926 bp, GenBank accession number: OK298388) of strain LY01 shared 99.16%, 99.46% and 100% similarities with those of Pantoea ananatis TZ39 (GenBank accession numbers: CP081342.1 for 16S rDNA, MW981338.1 for leuS and MW981344.1 for rpoB), respectively, which suggest the pathogenic bacterial strain LY01 isolated is P. ananatis. In addition, the single colony of P. ananatis LY01 was shown as Fig. S2B. Furthermore, pathogenicity tests were also performed according to the following steps. Bacterial suspension at OD600=0.1 was inoculated into eight rice leaves of four healthy rice plants (Chunyou 584) at 25-33°C and 60%-80% relative humidity in the field using a clipping method (Yang et al. 2020) or spraying methods, and sterile distilled water was as negative control. The clipped leaves (Fig. S1B) and spray-inoculated leaves (Fig. S1C) showed dark green water-soaked streaks at 14 days after inoculation, respectively, which showed similar symptoms with those samples collected from the fields (Fig. S1A). On contrary, the control rice leaves remained healthy and symptomless (Fig. S2A). The bacterium was re-isolated in the inoculated rice leaves and the re-isolated bacterial isolates, which was confirmed by sequencing 16S rDNA, leuS and rpoB, incited the same symptoms as in fields, which fulfills Koch’s postulates. In the past decade, P. ananatis was reported to result in grain discoloration and leaf blight in China (Yan et al. 2010; Xue et al. 2020, Yu et al. 2021), which could result in 40% - 60% yield losses. To our best knowledge, this is the first report of the bacterial leaf streak-likely disease occurred in Shandong Province caused by P. ananatis, so we named it as Pantoea leaf streak of rice. Although P. ananatis was also reported in Zhejiang province and Jiangxi province, which caused leaf streak lesions on rice, the disease symptoms are completely different from those of Pantoea leaf streak of rice. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of Pantoea leaf streak of rice caused by P. ananatis. This study provides sloid evidence that Pantoea leaf streak of rice in Eastern China can be caused by the new pathogen, P. ananatis, rather than Xoc as traditionally assumed. Disease development and quarantine of the new Pantoea leaf streak of rice disease caused by P. ananatis on rice need more attention in the near future.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta Loc ◽  
Dragana Milošević ◽  
Maja Ignjatov ◽  
Žarko Ivanović ◽  
Dragana Budakov ◽  
...  

Soft rot and blackleg are common diseases affecting potato (Solanum tuberosum) production in Serbia. Pectinolytic plant pathogens belonging to the genera Pectobacterium cause soft rot and wilt diseases by plant cell wall degradation. These opportunistic phytopathogens lead to considerable economic losses in many potato-growing regions worldwide and are listed among top 10 plant pathogenic bacteria (Mansfield et al. 2012). Potato plants (cv. VR808) with symptoms of wilting, slow growth, stem blackening and tubers softening, were collected from a commercial potato field in Zobnatica (Serbia) in July 2019 and subjected to analysis. All symptoms occurred in the same field and the incidence of symptomatic plants was approximately 5%. Isolation was performed from 10 randomly chosen potato plant and tuber samples, expressing wilting and soft rot symptoms. Plant tissue was surface-disinfected and 1 cm length sections from the margins of lesions were macerated in sterile distilled water for 25 min and streaked on nutrient-agar medium. After 48 h of incubation at 26°C, predominant shiny, cream-colored, round colonies were obtained from all samples. Three representative isolates (MMZKVR1, MMZCVR2, and MMZKVR3) from independent samples were selected randomly and subjected to biochemical and pathogenicity tests. Isolates were gram-negative, nonfluorescent facultative anaerobes, exhibiting pectinolytic activity on potato tuber slices and hypersensitive response on tobacco leaves. They expressed catalase activity but did not express oxidase or acid phosphatase activity or produce indole. All strains grew at 37°C, in 5% NaCl, and reduced nitrate. Pathogenicity of the obtained isolates was tested on 3-week-old healthy potato plants (cv. VR808 and cv. Kiebitz) grown in commercial Baltic Tray Substrate (Hawita) in the greenhouse, as well as on potato tubers of the same varieties. Three potato plant stems per isolate were inoculated by the toothpick piercing method (Duarte et al. 2004) using bacterial suspension (approx. 1 × 108 CFU/ml). Inoculated plants were incubated under plastic bags in a greenhouse at 25 ± 2°C. Blackleg symptoms and stem wilting developed 48 hours after inoculation. No symptoms were observed on plants inoculated with sterile toothpicks dipped in sterile distilled water. The pathogen was re-isolated from symptomatic plants, fulfilling Koch's postulates and sequencing of 16S rDNA confirmed the originally isolated pathogen. Three potato tubers per isolate were inoculated by toothpicks dipped in bacterial suspension (approx. 1 × 108 CFU/ml). Inoculated tubers were placed in a sealed plastic container at 25 ± 2°C. Treatment with sterile distilled water was used as a negative control. Softening of the tissue around the inoculation point developed within 48 h from inoculation, and no symptoms developed on the control tubers. For molecular analyses, total DNA of the isolates was extracted using the DNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen). The isolates were not detected in diagnostic PCR assays using specific primers Br1F/L1R for the detection of P. brasiliense (Duarte et al. 2004) and primers EXPCCF/EXPCCR for P. catotovorum subsp. carotovorum (Kang et al. 2003). The 16S rDNA PCR amplification was performed using the universal PCR primer pair 27F/1492R (Fredriksson et al. 2013) and followed by Sanger sequencing (Macrogen Europe BV). The BLASTn analysis of sequences (GenBank Accession Numbers MZ048661, MZ048662, and MZ157274) revealed 100% query coverage and 100% identity to the sequences of Pectobacterium punjabense in NCBI (MT242589 and CP038498) isolated from potato in China and Pakistan (Sarfraz et al. 2018), respectively. All three obtained isolates were proposed to belong to Pectobacterium punjabense sp. nov. To further validate the identification, isolate MMZCVR2 of P. punjabense was selected for multilocus sequence analyses of 5 housekeeping genes (gyrA, recA, recN, rpoA and rpoS). The gyrA (MZ161817), recA (MZ161818), recN (MZ161819), rpoA (MZ161820) and rpoS (MZ161821) sequence analysis showed the highest nucleotide identity (99.44 to 100%) with P. punjabense strain SS95 (Sarfraz et al. 2018) previously deposited in NCBI GenBank database. To our knowledge, this is the first report of blackleg and soft rot caused by P. punjabense on potato in Serbia. Pectobacterium punjabense is a newly described species causing soft rot and blackleg disease in potato plants (Sarfraz et al. 2018). Its current geographic distribution is not well-described but important to know since soft rot bacteria are easily transported long distances in latently infected seed tubers and can cause significant economic losses in potato production worldwide.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Conrado Parraguirre-Lezama ◽  
Omar Romero Arenas ◽  
Maria de los Angeles Valencia de Ita ◽  
Antonio Rivera ◽  
Nemesio Villa-Ruano ◽  
...  

Beans are the most cultivated legume in the world. In Mexico, it is the second most important crop after corn (FAO 2020; SIAP 2020). Bean plants “Flor de Mayo M38” variety were affected by a foliar disease during the agricultural cycle 2019 in Puebla-Mexico (19°02'46.6" LN and 98°05'15.6" LO). Necrotic V- shaped lesions were observed on the margins of the leaves surrounded by yellow halos followed by foliar necrosis, affecting 40% of the crop. In Mexico this variety of cultivars is in great demand for local consumption and generates income in foreign currency (Castellanos et al. 1997). Sampling was carried out on 50 plants “Flor de Mayo M38” variety, with necrotic leaf symptoms from ten plots of one hectare. Samples were cut into pieces (5 mm), disinfested with 1% hypochlorite 3 min, and washed with sterile distilled water. Subsequently, samples were dried on sterile paper and placed on Petri plates containing yeast extract calcium carbonate dextrose agar (YDC) medium and kept at 36°C for 3 days. Colonies of ten typical bacteria isolated from all symptomatic plants were Gram (-), small and uniform in size with rounded edges, yellow, convex with entire borders and mucoid appearance on YDC. Bacteria did not grow on 0.1% triphenyl tetrazolium chloride amended casamino acid, peptone, and glucose medium (CPG). Biochemical tests showed that isolates did not reduce nitrate to nitrites, had positive catalase and starch hydrolysis, while the Kovac oxidase test was negative (Schaad and White 1974). Genus identity of the representative isolate Xcf1-APJR, was confirmed by 16S rRNA encoding gene partial sequencing, using universal primers 518F (5'-CCAGCAGCCGCGGTAATACG-3') and 800R (5′-TACCAGGGTATCTAATCC-3′) (Halim et al. 2020). BLASTn alignments against the nucleotide collection were 100% identical to Xanthomonas sequences including Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris strains NZ_AP019684.1, CP025750.1, and MN108237.1. The 1,418 bp sequence was deposited in the GenBank database under accession number MT645246. The identification of species/pathovar was accomplished by serological methods using a polyclonal antiserum specific for X. campestris pv. campestris (Popovic ́ et al. 2013) with the DAS-ELISA commercial kit (catalog number 07122C/096, LOEWE Biochemica GmbH, Germany). The pathogenicity test was carried out on 50 healthy bean plants from the "Flor de Mayo M38" variety. Bacterial culture incubated at 28°C for 48 h in YDC medium was used to prepare the bacterial suspension (108 CFU mL-1). The first two lower leaves of 30-day-old plants were inoculated by sprinkling. Ten plants sprayed with sterile distilled water were used as negative control. All plants were kept for 20 days in greenhouse at 18-26°C and relative humidity of 60%. After seven days, chlorotic lesions developed on all inoculated plants that became necrotic from 14 days after inoculation (dai). Necrotic leaf spots merged at 14 dai to form necrotic areas of more than 20 mm in diameter, reaching total necrosis of the leaf tissue at 20 dai and were similar to the symptoms observed in the field. Koch's postulates were confirmed by the reisolation of Xcf1-APJR strain, which presented the same colony morphology, partial sequence, and polyclonal specific detection. This is the first report of this pathogen causing necrotic leaf spot in beans from the "Flor de Mayo M38" variety in Puebla-Mexico. The author(s) declare no conflict of interest. References: FAO. 2020. FAOSTAT. Food and Agriculture Data. http://www.fao.org/faostat/en/#home/. SIAP. 2020. Atlas Agroalimentario. https://www.gob.mx/siap/. Castellanos, J. Z., et al. 1997. Arch. Latinoam. Nutr. 47:163. Schaad, N. W., and White, W. C. 1974. Phytopathology. 64:876. https://doi.org/10.1094/Phyto-64-876 Halim, R. A., et al. 2020. HAYATI J. Biosciences. 27:215. https://doi.org/10.4308/hjb.27.3.215 Popovic ́, T., et al. 2013. Plant Dis. 97:418. https://doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-05-12-0506-PDN


Plant Disease ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Al-Saleh ◽  
Y. Ibrahim

In April of 2008, lettuce (Lactuca sativa L. cv. Darkland) plants grown in the Al-Ouunia Region of Saudi Arabia were observed with numerous lesions typical of bacterial leaf spot. Leaf lesions were irregular, small, pale green to black, and 2 to 5 mm in diameter. Bacteria were isolated from diseased leaf tissues by cutting leaves into small pieces (0.5 mm) and soaking them in 2 ml of sterile distilled water. The resulting suspension was streaked onto yeast dextrose calcium carbonate agar (YDC) (1) and plates were incubated at 28°C. Large, round, butyrus, bright yellow colonies typical of Xanthomonas spp. formed after 48 h and five strains were selected for further tests. A yellow, mucoid bacterium was consistently isolated from lettuce samples with typical bacterial leaf spot symptoms. All five strains tested in this study were gram negative, oxidase negative, nitrate reduction negative, catalase and esculin hydrolysis positive, motile, and strictly aerobic. All were slightly pectolytic but not amylolytic. All were identified as Xanthomonas campestris pv. vitians. The bacterium was identified with specific oligonucleotide primers (2). This primer pair directed the amplification of an approximately 700-bp DNA fragment from total genomic DNA of all X. campestris pv. vitians strains tested. Pathogenicity tests were performed by using bacterial cultures grown on YDC for 48 h at 28°C. Each strain was suspended in sterile distilled water and the bacterial concentration was adjusted to 106 CFU/ml. Leaves of 5-week-old lettuce plants (cv. Darkland) were sprayed with the bacterial suspension. The inoculated and sterile-water-sprayed control plants were covered with polyethylene bags for 48 h at 25°C, after which the bags were removed and plants were transferred to a greenhouse at 25 to 28°C (1). All strains were pathogenic on the lettuce cv. Darkland, causing typical bacterial leaf spot symptoms by 2 weeks after inoculation. All inoculated plants showed typical symptoms of bacterial leaf spot and symptoms similar to those observed on the samples collected. No symptoms developed on the control plants. The bacterium was reisolated from inoculated plants and identified as X. campestris pv. vitians by morphological, physiological, and biochemical tests as described above. To our knowledge, this is the first report of bacterial leaf spot of lettuce by X. campestris pv. vitians in Saudi Arabia. References: (1) F. Sahin and A. Miller. Plant Dis.81:1443, 1997. (2) J. D. Barak. Plant Dis.85:169, 2001.


Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (10) ◽  
pp. 1580-1580
Author(s):  
J. H. Park ◽  
K. S. Han ◽  
J. Y. Kim ◽  
H. D. Shin

Sweet basil, Ocimum basilicum L., is a fragrant herb belonging to the family Lamiaceae. Originated in India 5,000 years ago, sweet basil plays a significant role in diverse cuisines across the world, especially in Asian and Italian cooking. In October 2008, hundreds of plants showing symptoms of leaf spot with nearly 100% incidence were found in polyethylene tunnels at an organic farm in Icheon, Korea. Leaf spots were circular to subcircular, water-soaked, dark brown with grayish center, and reached 10 mm or more in diameter. Diseased leaves defoliated prematurely. The damage purportedly due to this disease has reappeared every year with confirmation of the causal agent made again in 2011. A cercosporoid fungus was consistently associated with disease symptoms. Stromata were brown, consisting of brown cells, and 10 to 40 μm in width. Conidiophores were fasciculate (n = 2 to 10), olivaceous brown, paler upwards, straight to mildly curved, not geniculate in shorter ones or one to two times geniculate in longer ones, 40 to 200 μm long, occasionally reaching up to 350 μm long, 3.5 to 6 μm wide, and two- to six-septate. Conidia were hyaline, acicular to cylindric, straight in shorter ones, flexuous to curved in longer ones, truncate to obconically truncate at the base, three- to 16-septate, and 50 to 300 × 3.5 to 4.5 μm. Morphological characteristics of the fungus were consistent with the previous reports of Cercospora guatemalensis A.S. Mull. & Chupp (1,3). Voucher specimens were housed at Korea University herbarium (KUS). An isolate from KUS-F23757 was deposited in the Korean Agricultural Culture Collection (Accession No. KACC43980). Fungal DNA was extracted with DNeasy Plant Mini DNA Extraction Kits (Qiagen Inc., Valencia, CA). The complete internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA was amplified with the primers ITS1/ITS4 and sequenced. The resulting sequence of 548 bp was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. JQ995781). This showed >99% similarity with sequences of many Cercospora species, indicating their close phylogenetic relationship. Isolate of KACC43980 was used in the pathogenicity tests. Hyphal suspensions were prepared by grinding 3-week-old colonies grown on PDA with distilled water using a mortar and pestle. Five plants were inoculated with hyphal suspensions and five plants were sprayed with sterile distilled water. The plants were covered with plastic bags to maintain a relative humidity of 100% for 24 h and then transferred to a 25 ± 2°C greenhouse with a 12-h photoperiod. Typical symptoms of necrotic spots appeared on the inoculated leaves 6 days after inoculation, and were identical to the ones observed in the field. C. guatemalensis was reisolated from symptomatic leaf tissues, confirming Koch's postulates. No symptoms were observed on control plants. Previously, the disease was reported in Malawi, India, China, and Japan (2,3), but not in Korea. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. guatemalensis on sweet basil in Korea. Since farming of sweet basil has recently started on a commercial scale in Korea, the disease poses a serious threat to safe production of this herb, especially in organic farming. References: (1) C. Chupp. A Monograph of the Fungus Genus Cercospora. Ithaca, NY, 1953. (2) D. F. Farr and A. Y. Rossman. Fungal Databases. Systematic Mycology & Microbiology Laboratory, ARS, USDA. Retrieved from http://nt.ars-grin.gov/fungaldatabases/ , May 5, 2012. (3) J. Nishikawa et al. J. Gen. Plant Pathol. 68:46, 2002.


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