AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacterial canker of tomato, caused by a Gram-positive corynebacterium, is a significant seed-borne disease affecting both open air and greenhouse tomatoes, recognized by its yellow-pigmented colonies.
  • In 2020 and 2021, new pink-pigmented strains were isolated from infected tomato seeds and plants in Southern Iran, proving pathogenic to tomato and pepper seedlings in greenhouse tests.
  • Phylogenomic analysis revealed these pink strains are closely related to the yellow-pigmented pathogens, indicating they are a new variant and suggesting a need to update diagnostic guidelines based on colony morphology.

Article Abstract

Bacterial canker of tomato caused by the Gram-positive corynebacterial species is one of the most destructive seed-borne diseases in both open air and greenhouse tomatoes. The pathogen is a regulated agent in all tomato-producing countries as translocation of infected tomato materials transports the bacterium into new areas. is generally known to have yellow-pigmented colonies on culture media, which is a key differentiative phenotypic feature in standard diagnostic guidelines. During 2020 and 2021, pink-pigmented corynebacterial strains were isolated from tomato seeds (cv. Sun 6189F1) and plants showing severe canker symptoms in Southern Iran. The six pink-pigmented strains were pathogenic on tomato and pepper seedlings under greenhouse conditions, and gave positive results with -specific primers pairs described in the literature. Phylogenomics and DNA similarity calculations showed that the pink-pigmented strains were highly similar to the authentic yellow-pigmented members of the pathogen. Thus, they were identified as a new phenotypic variant of tomato bacterial canker pathogen. Whole genome screenings accomplished with PCR-based assays showed that the pink strains contain all pathogenicity determinant genes described in . Further, orthologous gene clusters in the pink-pigmented strains were more similar to the pathogenic members of than to those of non-pathogenic tomato-associated species. Results obtained in this study demonstrate the emergence of a new pink-pigmented variant of and highlight the importance of colony pigmentation/morphology in culture-based detection of the bacterium. The need for updating diagnostic guidelines on the colony variants of the pathogen is further discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PHYTO-07-24-0236-RDOI Listing

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