AI Article Synopsis

  • Symptoms of phytoplasma infection were noted in cauliflower (cultivar NS60N) in Kerala, India, with disease incidence reaching up to 10%, characterized by stunted growth, floral malformations, and stem flattening.
  • Testing for the presence of phytoplasma used nested PCR on symptomatic and asymptomatic plants, yielding consistent amplification of specific genes only in symptomatic samples, with subsequent cloning and sequencing confirming a 99.77% match to a reference strain.
  • Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the phytoplasma linked to the observed cauliflower disease belonged to the 16SrXIV-A subgroup, with no signs of infection found in asymptomatic plants.

Article Abstract

Symptoms of suspected phytoplasma infection were observed in cauliflower ( var. ) (cultivar NS60N) at Integrated Farming System Research Station, Trivandrum, Kerala, India (08o28'28"N, 76o57'47"E) in April-2021. The disease incidence was recorded up to 10% in different fields. The disease manifested as stunting, phyllody, floral malformation and flattening of stem (Fig.1A,B). Ten symptomatic and five asymptomatic plants were assayed for the presence of phytoplasma using nested PCR assays performed with P1/P7 and R16F2n/R16R2 primer pairs for 16S rRNA gene and SecAfor1/ SecArev3 and SecAfor2/ SecArev3 for secA gene (Deng and Hiruki 1991; Gundersen and Lee 1996; Hodgetts et al. 2008). The expected amplicons of ~1.25 kb and ~480 bp were consistently amplified in all the symptomatic cauliflower samples with the phytoplasma specific universal 16S rRNA and secA gene specific primers. Nested PCR products (~1.2 kb and 480 bp) amplified from cauliflower was cloned in restriction sites of pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega, USA). The cloned nested PCR products were directly sequenced (16S rRNA gene: Acc. Nos. MZ196223, MZ196224; secA gene: MZ215721, MZ215722) in both forward and reverse directions which showed 99.77% sequence identity with Phytoplasma cynodontis reference strain (Acc. No. AJ550984). Further analyses of the 16S rRNA and secA genes based phylogenetic tree (Fig. 2A and B) and the iPhyClassifier-based virtual RFLP analysis of 16Sr RNA gene study demonstrated that the phytoplasma-associated with cauliflower phyllody & flat stem disease (CaPP) belonged to 16SrXIV-A subgroup with a similarity coefficient of 1.0. No amplicon was observed from any of the asymptomatic cauliflower plants with the specific tested primers of both the genes. Earlier association of 16SrXV-A subgroup ( Phytoplasma brasiliense) and 16Sr III-J subgroup in Brazil (Canale and Badendo, 2013; Rappussi et al. 2012), 16SrII-A ( Phytoplasma aurantifolia) subgroup in China (Cai et al. 2016) and 16SrVI-A ( Phytoplasma trifolii) subgroup in Iran (Salehi 2007) were reported in cauliflower. Another species of cabbage, var. L. was reported as host of . P. trifloii (16Sr VI-D subgroup) from north India (Gopala et al. 2018). To our knowledge, this is the first report of a ' Phytoplasma cynodontis', 16SrXIV-A subgroup related phytoplasma strain associated with cauliflower phyllody and flat stem in the world. The results described in this report confirm that the 16SrXIV-A phytoplasma, a widely distributed strain associated with sugarcane, wheat, grasses, sapota and many ornamentals in India (Rao 2021), has also infected cauliflower. This is not only the first instance of cauliflower phyllody disease found in India, but also the first instance of CaPP disease caused by 16SrXIV-A subgroup phytoplasma worldwide. This report has epidemiological significance and needs immediate attention, as cauliflower is the one of the most common vegetable crop grown all over India.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-05-21-1047-PDNDOI Listing

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  • Symptoms of phytoplasma infection were noted in cauliflower (cultivar NS60N) in Kerala, India, with disease incidence reaching up to 10%, characterized by stunted growth, floral malformations, and stem flattening.
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  • Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the phytoplasma linked to the observed cauliflower disease belonged to the 16SrXIV-A subgroup, with no signs of infection found in asymptomatic plants.
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