scholarly journals First report of Erwina amylovora in Tuscany, Italy

2021 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 253-257
Author(s):  
Duccio MIGLIORINI ◽  
Francesco PECORI ◽  
Aida RAIO ◽  
Nicola LUCHI ◽  
Domenico RIZZO ◽  
...  

2-years-old plants of Pyrus communis showing symptoms of fire blight disease were sampled in an orchard in Tuscany (Italy) during Autumn 2020. Plants were obtained the previous spring from a commercial nursery located in a region where the disease is present since 1994. The collected material was processed in the lab in order to verify the presence of the bacterium Erwinia amylovora, the causal agent of fire blight. Pure isolates showing white mucoid colonies and levan producers on Levan medium were putatively assimilated to E. amylovora. DNA was extracted from the cultures and analysed with three molecular assays, including duplex PCR of the 29-Kb plasmid pEA29 and the ams chromosomal region, sequencing of the 16S rDNA and recA gene regions, two real-time PCR assays on symptomatic plant tissues. All tests confirmed the presence of E. amylovora. Symptomatic and surrounding plants were removed and immediately destroyed according to the regional phytosanitary protocol. This outcome poses a serious threat for fruit orchards in the area.

2011 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasemin EVRENOSOĞLU ◽  
Adalet MISIRLI ◽  
Hikmet SAYGILI ◽  
Emre BİLEN ◽  
Özlem BOZTEPE ◽  
...  

Fire blight disease caused by pathogenic bacterium Erwinia amylovora, is the serious disease of pear, and there is not a certain chemical management against this disease except antibiotic-type compounds such as streptomycin. It is very important to improve new fire blight resistant cultivars in case of integrated disease management. With this purpose, different crosses have been made between Pyrus communis varieties that have good fruit characteristics and resistant cultigens. Besides, self and open pollination treatments have been carried out in maternal plants. The disease resistance level of the hybrids obtained from these combinations was determined by artificial inoculations by Erwinia amylovora in greenhouse conditions. A total of 3284 hybrids were inoculated, and 2631 of them survived and were distributed to different susceptibility classes. 19.88% of the inoculated hybrids was killed by Erwinia amylovora. Total distribution of the hybrids to susceptibility classes was as 6.18% in class “A- slightly susceptible”, 3.11% in class “B- less susceptible”, 8.89% in class “C- mid-susceptible”, 20.28% in class “D- susceptible”, and 61.54% in class “E- very susceptible”. Majority of class “A- slightly susceptible” hybrids were obtained from ‘Magness’ x ‘Ankara’ combination. ‘Kieffer’ x ‘Santa Maria’, ‘Kieffer’ open pollination, ‘Magness’ x ‘Akça’, ‘Magness’ x ‘Kieffer’, ‘Magness’ x ‘Santa Maria’, ‘Mustafa Bey’ x ‘Moonglow’ treatments displayed good results with respect to “A- slightly susceptible” character. It is very important to evaluate these hybrid pear populations through different fruit and tree characteristics in the future.


2018 ◽  
Vol 117 ◽  
pp. 7-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Smail Ait Bahadou ◽  
Abderrahmane Ouijja ◽  
Abdelkarim Karfach ◽  
Abdessalem Tahiri ◽  
Rachid Lahlali

Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (8) ◽  
pp. 1111-1111 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. N. Mollaei ◽  
B. Harighi

Pear (Pyrus L.) is one of the most widely grown crops in western Iran. Since 2010, an outbreak of a disease with symptoms similar to fire blight has been observed on pear trees in various locations of Kurdistan Province. Initial flower symptoms include water-soaking and rapidly shriveling, infected flowers that remained hanging on the trees. Immature fruits become water-soaked, turned brown, and shriveled. Infected flowers and immature fruits were collected from different locations in the province. Small pieces (about 1 mm2) were excised from infected tissues, surface sterilized with 0.5% sodium hypochlorite solution, followed by rinsing in sterile-distilled water (SDW). Each piece was macerated in 2 to 3 ml of SDW, streaked onto nutrient agar sucrose or eosin methylene blue agar media, and incubated at 27 to 29°C. After 48 to 72 h, single colonies were subcultured onto the same media and stored at 4°C. In total, 74 bacteria were isolated from infected tissues. All isolates were gram-negative and rod-shaped. Based on other phenotypic properties, strains were grouped into three clusters at a similarity level of 65% (data not shown). Forty-one and 23 strains showed properties as expected for Erwinia amylovora and Enterobacter sp., respectively. Other strains showed properties resembling Pantoea agglomerans. All strains identified as E. amylovora produced an expected DNA fragment of about 900 bp by PCR using primers PE29A and PE29B corresponding to plasmid pEA29 (1). The result was confirmed by using primers AMSbL and AMSbR derived from the ams region required for amylovoran synthesis of E. amylovora. E. amylovora strains produced an expected 1,600-bp fragment (2). For the pathogenicity test, a bacterial suspension was adjusted to approximately 1 × 107 CFU/ml from cell cultures grown in nutrient broth at 27°C for 48 h. Immature pear fruits sterilized with 70% ethanol and rinsed with SDW were injected with the bacterial suspension using a 25-gauge sterile needle. Fruits injected with sterile water were used as controls. Pear fruits were kept in a mist chamber at 27 to 29°C. Symptoms were assessed up to 2 weeks after inoculation. All E. amylovora strains produced typical symptoms on inoculated immature pear fruits. Necrosis and oozing of bacterial exudates were observed after 3 to 7 days. The phylogenetic position of two selected strains was analyzed by sequence comparison of recA gene among other species in the genus Erwinia and related bacteria. The recA sequence of bacterial strains identified as E. amylovora revealed high similarity (99%) to the E. amylovora type strain (CFBP 1430). Genetic diversity of selected strains was assessed and compared with E. amylovora reference strain CFBP 1430 using ERIC and REP primers in rep-PCR analysis. (3). UPGMA cluster analysis of the combined data obtained in the rep-PCR experiments using Dice's coefficient revealed that the majority of E. amylovora strains showed the same fingerprint patterns at a similarity level of 93%, indicating genetic homogeneity among strains but clearly separated from Enterobacter sp. and P. agglomerans strains. To our knowledge, this is the first report that characterizes the phenotypic and genetic properties of E. amylovora in western part of Iran. References: (1) S. Bereswill et al. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 58:3522, 1992. (2) S. Bereswill et al. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 61:2636, 1995. (3) J. Versalovic et al. Mol. Cell Biol. 5:25, 1994.


2003 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Honty ◽  
Z. Boldog ◽  
M. Göndör ◽  
J. Papp ◽  
K. Kása ◽  
...  

Research project has been initiated in 1999 with the aim of evaluating the degree of susceptibility/resistance of pear cultivars grown in Hungary to fire blight disease caused by Erwinia amylovora. The recently selected promising cultivars were also examined. Inoculation experiments were conducted in controlled greenhouse conditions because of quarantine regulations in Hungary. Following the disease process, development of symptoms of plant organs (shoots, flower parts, fruits) was observed. Suspension of two E. amylovora strains (Ea 21, Ea 23) isolated from pear was used in a mixture (5x108 cells x m1-1) for the inoculation. Twenty-six pear cultivars were examined and grouped into four categories: low susceptibility, moderately susceptible, susceptible and very susceptible. Most of the cultivars were susceptible or very susceptible while some promising 'Eldorado', 'Harrow Delight' and `Hosui' showed low susceptibility.


Author(s):  
Kubilay Kurtulus Bastas

Erwinia amylovora, the causative agent of fire blight disease, threatens a lot of species of the Rosaceae family. Antibiotics and copper compounds in chemical applications are most frequently are applied, but these can be phytotoxic and cause resistant strains of the pathogen. In our experiments, 20 herbal materials were tested for their antimicrobial effectiveness against the fire blight pathogen in vitro and in planta. The air-dried plants ground into fine powder and extraction was performed at room temperature by maceration with 80% (v/v) methanol/distilled water. The minimum inhibitory concentration values were determined by using disc diffusion method and streptomycin was used as control in all experiments. Antimicrobial activity was evaluated by measuring the inhibition zones in reference to the pathogen. Among the tested plants, Szygium aromaticum, Thymus vulgaris and Rhus cararia showed a good antibacterial activity and they inhibited the growth of E. amylovora with inhibition zone diameter ranging from 21 to 27 mm at 20% (w/v) in absolute methanol compared to streptomycin (31 mm) in vitro conditions. In vivo tests were performed by using highly virulent E. amylovora isolate (Eak24b, 91%) grown on TSA medium and inoculation on young shoots of 3-year-old Gala variety of apple and Santa Maria variety of pear seedlings at 107 CFU ml-1 density of the pathogen. Disease severity (%) was assessed by by proportion of blighted shoot length to the whole shoot length and also efficacy of the extracts was determined by using Abbott formula. The highest efficacy was obtained by S. aromaticum and T. vulgaris extracts of reducing shoot blight of cv. Gala and cv. Santa Maria by 67.81% - 64-12% and 51.50% - 51.04% ratios, respectively. Obtaining results showed that some medicinal and aromatic plant extracts might be used against fire blight disease as potential new generation chemicals on pome fruits within integrated and organic control programs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-28
Author(s):  
Young-Uk Park ◽  
Jong-Woo Han ◽  
Chul-Ku Yoon ◽  
Seok-Ho Lee ◽  
Song Yoon ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuela Campa ◽  
Stefano Piazza ◽  
Laura Righetti ◽  
Chang-Sik Oh ◽  
Lorenza Conterno ◽  
...  

Fire blight, a devastating disease caused by the bacterium Erwinia amylovora, is a major threat to apple crop production. To improve our understanding of the fire blight disease and to identify potential strategies to control the pathogen, we studied the apple protein HIPM (for HrpN-interacting protein from Malus spp.), which has previously been identified as interacting with the E. amylovora effector protein HrpN. Transgenic apple plants were generated with reduced HIPM expression, using an RNA interference construct, and were subsequently analyzed for susceptibility to E. amylovora infection. Lines exhibiting a greater than 50% silencing of HIPM expression showed a significant decrease in susceptibility to E. amylovora infection. Indeed, a correlation between HIPM expression and E. amylovora infection was identified, demonstrating the crucial role of HIPM during fire blight disease progression. Furthermore, an apple oxygen-evolving enhancer-like protein (MdOEE) was identified via a yeast two-hybrid screen to interact with HIPM. This result was confirmed with bimolecular fluorescence complementation assays and leads to new hypotheses concerning the response mechanism of the plant to E. amylovora as well as the mechanism of infection of the bacterium. These results suggest that MdOEE and, particularly, HIPM are promising targets for further investigations toward the genetic improvement of apple.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anita Kurilla ◽  
Timea Toth ◽  
Laszlo Dorgai ◽  
Zsuzsanna Darula ◽  
Tamas Lakatos ◽  
...  

AbstractTo attract pollinators many angiosperms secrete stigma exudate and nectar in their flowers. As these nutritious fluids are ideal infection points for pathogens, both secretions contain various antimicrobial compounds. Erwinia amylovora, the causing bacterium of the devastating fire blight apple disease, is the model pathogen that multiplies in flower secretions and infects through the nectaries. Although Erwinia resistant apples are not available, certain cultivars are tolerant. It was reported that in stigma infection assay, the ‘Freedom’ cultivar was Erwinia tolerant while the ‘Jonagold’ was susceptible. We hypothesized that differences in the nectar protein compositions lead to different susceptibility. Indeed we found that an acidic chitinase III protein (Machi3-1) selectively accumulates in the nectar and stigma of the ‘Freedom’ cultivar. We demonstrate that MYB binding site containing repeats of the ‘Freedom’ Machi3-1 promoter are responsible for the strong nectar- and stigma-specific expression. As we found that in vitro the Machi3-1 protein impairs growth and biofilm formation of Erwinia at physiological concentration, we propose that the Machi3-1 contribute to the tolerance by inhibiting Erwinia multiplication in the stigma exudate and in the nectar. We show that the Machi3-1 allele was introgressed from Malus floribunda 821 into different apple cultivars including the ‘Freedom’.HighlightCertain apple cultivars accumulate to high levels in their nectar and stigma an acidic chitinase III protein that can protect against pathogens including fire blight disease causing Erwinia amylovora


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