Melochia corchorifolia L. is a plant belonging to the family Sterculiaceae, extracts from this plant have been reported to inhibit melanogenesis (Yuan et al., 2020). During September to November 2020, the plants showing abnormal symptoms including witches'-broom, leaf chlorosis, leaflet and internode shortening (Fig.1), were found in Dingan county of Hainan province, China, with about 50% infection rates in the field. The disease symptoms were suspected to be caused by the phytoplasma, a plant pathogenic prokaryotes that could not be cultured in vitro. Aiming to confirm the pathogen causing the symptoms, total DNA of the symptomatic or asymptomatic Melochia corchorifolia samples were extracted by CTAB method (Doyle and Doyle, 1990) using 0.10 g fresh plant leaves using the rapid extraction kit for plant genomic DNA (CTAB Plant Genome DNA Rapid Extraction Kit, Aidlab Biotechnologies Co., Ltd, Beijing, China). PCR reactions were performed using primers R16mF2/R16mR1 (Gundersen and Lee, 1996) specific for phytoplasma 16S rRNA gene fragments. PCR products of phytoplasma 16S rRNA gene sequences were obtained from the ten symptomatic plant samples but not from the DNA of the asymptomatic plant samples. The PCR products were cloned and sequenced by Biotechnology (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China) and the data were deposited in GenBank. The sequences of 16S rRNA gene fragments amplified from the DNA extracted from the disease plant samples were all identical, with a length of 1336 bp for the 16S rRNA (GenBank accession: MZ353520). Nucleotide Blast search based on the 16S rRNA gene fragment of the phytoplasma strain showed 100% sequence identities with that of 16SrII peanut witches'-broom group members, such as Cassava witches'-broom phytoplasma (KM280679), Cleome sp. phytoplasma (KM280677), Tephrosia purpurea witches'-broom phytoplasma (MW616560), Desmodium triflorum little leaf phytoplasma (MT452308) and Peanut witches'-broom phytoplasma (JX403944). Analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequence of McWB-hnda strain by interactive online phytoplasma classification tool iPhyClassifier (Zhao et al., 2009) indicated that the phytoplasma strain is a member of 16SrII-V subgroup. The phytoplasma strain was named as Melochia corchorifolia witches'-broom (McWB) phytoplasma, McWB-hnda strain. Phylogenetic analysis performed by MEGA 7.0 employing neighbor-joining (NJ) method with 1000 bootstrap value (Kumar et al., 2016) indicated that the McWB-hnda phytoplasma strain was clustered into one clade with the phytoplasma strains of Tephrosia purpurea witches'-broom, Cleome sp., Peanut witches'-broom, Cassava witches'-broom and Desmodium triflorum little leaf with 97 % bootstrap value (Fig.2); McWB-hnda phytoplasma strain identified in the study and Melochia corchorifolia phyllody phytoplasma strain (KX150461) belonging to 16SrI-B subgroup previously identified in the Hainan Island of China by Chen et al. (2017) are in two independent clades(Fig.2). To our knowledge, this is the first report of a 16SrII-V subgroup phytoplasma associated with Melochia corchorifolia witches'-broom disease in Hainan Province, a tropical island of China. The phytoplasma strain identified in the study was relatively close to 16SrII peanut witches'-broom group phytoplasma strains associated with witches'-broom or little leaf diseases in the plants like Peanut, Tephrosia purpurea, Cassava and Desmodium triflorum. Our finding in the study indicated that Melochia corchorifolia may act as an alternative natural host not only for 16SrI-B subgroup phytoplasma but also for 16SrII-V subgroup phytoplasma, which would contribute to the spreading of the related phytoplasma diseases.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-07-21-1375-PDNDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

melochia corchorifolia
28
phytoplasma strain
28
phytoplasma
24
16s rrna
24
subgroup phytoplasma
20
rrna gene
20
16srii-v subgroup
16
peanut witches'-broom
16
witches'-broom
13
plant samples
12

Similar Publications

Melochia corchorifolia is a well-known perennial herb and has been used in traditional medicine for the treatment of a wide number of diseases. However, the phytochemical investigation in the different organs of the M. corchorifolia was poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The complete chloroplast genome sequence of Linnaeus, 1753 (Sterculiaceae).

Mitochondrial DNA B Resour

January 2024

School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Zhejiang Chinese Medical University, Hangzhou, China.

Linnaeus, 1753, is a weedy tropical plant of the Sterculiaceae family and has medicinal value. We sequenced the complete chloroplast genome of using Illumina high-throughput sequencing and examined phylogenetic relationships with closely related species. The assembled chloroplast genome of was 163,693 bp long and contained a pair of inverted repeats of 29,729 bp, separated by a large single-copy sequence of 84,350 bp and a small single-copy region of 19,885 bp.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study identified and characterized pathogens linked to Huanglongbing symptoms in citrus crops on Hainan Island, focusing on phytoplasma and Liberibacter asiaticus.
  • Detection methods included analyzing gene fragments specific to these pathogens, revealing mixed infections and specific subgroups of phytoplasmas present in diseased plants.
  • This research marks the first report of 16SrII-V and 16SrXXXII-D subgroup phytoplasmas infecting citrus in China, as well as instances of co-infection with Liberibacter asiaticus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Melochia corchorifolia L. is a plant belonging to the family Sterculiaceae, extracts from this plant have been reported to inhibit melanogenesis (Yuan et al., 2020).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The cotton bollworm is a serious pest of many economically important crops. Since this pest has become resistant to the conventional synthetic insecticides, newer compounds and formulations are being developed against this insect pest. Many natural compounds isolated from the plants were tested against this pest.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!