Commercial strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa Duchesne) plants that were either chlorotic and severely stunted or exhibiting fruit phyllody were collected in Maryland. The plants were assessed for phytoplasma infection by nested polymerase chain reactions primed by phytoplasma universal primer pairs R16mF2/R1 and F2n/R2 (2) or P1/P7 (3) and F2n/R2 for amplification of phytoplasma 16S ribosomal (r) DNA (16S rRNA gene) sequences. Phytoplasma-characteristic 1.2-kbp DNA sequences were amplified from all diseased plants. No phytoplasma-characteristic DNAs were amplified from healthy plants. Restriction fragment length polymorphism patterns of rDNA digested with AluI, KpnI, HhaI, HaeIII, HpaII, MseI, RsaI, and Sau3A1 endonucleases indicated that chlorotic and stunted plants were infected by a phytoplasma that belonged to subgroup 16SrIII-B (clover yellow edge [CYE] subgroup) and that the plant exhibiting fruit phyllody was infected by a phytoplasma that belonged to subgroup 16SrI-K (STRAWB2 subgroup). The STRAWB2 phytoplasma was first reported from strawberry plants grown in Florida and characterized as representative of a new subgroup of the aster yellows group, 16SrI (3); this is the first report of this phytoplasma occurring in strawberry outside of Florida. A STRAWB2-infected plant produced phylloid fruits in two consecutive years of observation in the greenhouse; the plant previously had been field-grown in a breeder's evaluation plots in Beltsville, MD. The CYE phytoplasma was first experimentally transmitted by leafhopper to commercial strawberry and F. virginiana Duchesne in Ontario Canada (1); this is the first report of natural CYE phytoplasma infection of strawberry in Maryland. CYE phytoplasma-infected plants, representing ≈5% of the total number of plants of one advanced sselection, were located in a breeder's evaluation plots in Beltsville. References: (1) L. N. Chiykowski. Can. J. Bot. 54:1171, 1976. (2) D. E. Gunderson and I.-M. Lee. Phytopathol. Mediterr. 35:144, 1996. (3) R. Jomantiene et al. Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 48:269, 1998.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS.1999.83.11.1072C | DOI Listing |
Elife
January 2025
John Innes Centre, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, United Kingdom.
Obligate parasites often trigger significant changes in their hosts to facilitate transmission to new hosts. The molecular mechanisms behind these extended phenotypes - where genetic information of one organism is manifested as traits in another - remain largely unclear. This study explores the role of the virulence protein SAP54, produced by parasitic phytoplasmas, in attracting leafhopper vectors.
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January 2025
Division of Plant Pathology, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi, 110012 India.
During November-December of 2019, severe witches' broom along with little leaf and stunting symptoms was observed in at Indian Institute of Sugarcane Research, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh with an average disease incidence of 20%. An amplicon of ~ 1.3 kb of 16S rRNA gene was amplified in symptomatic .
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December 2024
Department of Agriculture, Food and Environment, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy.
Plant Dis
December 2024
Nature Research Centre, Laboratory of Plant Pathology, Vilnius, Lithuania;
European blueberries ( L.) can be found across the Northern Hemisphere, particularly in cool, temperate forests. These shrubs produce dark blue berries that are rich in vitamins, antioxidants, and anthocyanins making them valuable for both human consumption and food supplements.
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December 2024
ICAR - Indian Institute of Wheat and Barley Research, Karnal, Haryana, India;
Guar or cluster bean (Cyamopsis tetragonoloba L.) is a leguminous crop well-suited for cultivation in arid and semi-arid regions. India accounts for 90% of world's guar production.
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