First Report of pv. causing Bacterial Canker in Sweet Cherry Orchards in Washington State.

Plant Dis

Washington State University, Plant Pathology, 24106 N. Bunn Rd, Pullman, Washington, United States, 99164-1009.

Published: June 2024

In 2023, an outbreak of bacterial canker disease (BCD) in sweet cherry orchards caused significant economic losses to growers and nurseries in the Pacific Northwest, USA (Fig. S1). The cherry industry in Washington State alone is valued at over $800 million (USDA NASS, 2022). BCD poses a recurring threat to the state's sweet cherry [Prunus avium (L.) L.] orchards, especially young and newly planted orchards. Three Pseudomonas species, including P. syringae pv. syringae (Pss), P. amygdali pv. morsprunorum (Pam) (formerly P. syringae pv. morsprunorum Race 1, Psm1), and P. avellanae pv. morsprunorum (formerly P. syringae pv. morsprunorum Race 2, Psm2), have been reported to be associated with BCD in sweet cherries (Hulin et al. 2019). While Pss is widely prevalent in the United States, Pam has only been reported in Michigan (Renick et al., 2008) as well as in Europe, Central America, South Africa and Australia (Hulin et al. 2019) . In 2023, we surveyed more than 60 cherry orchards and collected hundreds of canker samples from newly planted up to 8-year-old trees. BCD prevalence ranged from 40-100% in cherry orchards, leading to the removal of hundreds of thousands of trees. Affected cherry trees exhibited characteristic bacterial canker symptoms, including dead bud, canker, and gummosis (Fig. S1). Bacteria were isolated from canker tissues or ooze on King's B (KB) agar plates (King et al., 1954) and more than 300 fluorescent Pseudomonas isolates were obtained from 12 symptomatic sweet cherry cultivars. PCR results using Pss- and Pam- specific primers (SyrB and Psm1, Table S1) (Sorensen et al., 1998; Kałużna et al., 2016) revealed that 91.9% and 8% isolates were tested positive for SyrB and Psm1, indicating that these isolates potentially belong to Pss and Pam, respectively. Pathogenicity tests using immature cherries cv. Sentina showed that all isolates caused typical necrotic lesions and could be re-isolated and re-identified as Pss and Pam, thus completing Koch's postulates. The identity of three Pam representative isolates (S79, S158, S202) was further confirmed by comparing gyrD and rpoD housekeeping genes as well as 16S rRNA gene sequence with other Pam strains in GenBank (Parkinson et al., 2010; Gomila et al., 2017). Blast searches against GenBank using gyrB (GenBank accession numbers PP357444-PP357446), rpoD (PP357447-PP357449) and 16S rRNA (GenBank accession numbers PP421223-PP421225) gene sequences, ranging from 520 to 859bp, matched those of the Pam isolates (GenBank accession numbers CP026558 or PP218075) with 100% homology and 100% query coverage, further indicating that these isolates are indeed Pam. This represents the first documented record of Pam causing BCD in the Pacific Northwest, USA, suggesting the complexity of the disease, which underscores the need for effective management strategies for cherry growers in the region.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-04-24-0718-PDNDOI Listing

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