First report of bacterial leaf blight caused by Xanthomonas hortorum pv. carotae on carrots in Spain
Autor
Fecha
2021Cita bibliográfica
Palomo, J. L., Shima, M., Monterde, A., Navarro, I., Barbé, S., & Marco-Noales, E. First report of bacterial leaf blight caused by Xanthomonas hortorum pv. carotae on carrots in Spain. Plant disease. Published on-line, 23 february 2021.Resumen
In September 2019, symptoms resembling those of bacterial leaf blight were observed on
carrot plants (Daucus carota L. subsp. sativus Hoffm.) cv. Romance cultivated in
commercial plots in Chañe (Segovia), Spain. Symptoms were observed in two plots
surveyed representing three hectares, with an incidence greater than 90%, and also in
some plots in other nearby municipalities sown with the same batch of seeds. The lesions
observed at the ends of the leaves were initially yellow that develop dark brown to black
with chlorotic halos on leaflets that turned necrotic. Yellow, Xanthomonas-like colonies
were isolated onto YPGA medium (Ridé 1969) from leaf lesions. Two bacterial isolates
were selected and confirmed by real-time PCR using a specific primer set for
Xanthomonas hortorum pv. carotae (Temple et al. 2013). All isolates were gram-negative,
aerobic rods positive for catalase, able of hydrolyzing casein and aesculin and growing at
2% NaCl, while were negative for oxidase and urease tests. Sequences of 16S rRNA gene
showed 100% similarity with Xanthomonas campestris, X. arboricola, X. gardneri, X.
cynarae strains (GenBank accession numbers: MW077507.1 and MW077508.1 for the
isolates CRD19-206.3 and CRD19-206.4, respectively). However, the resulting phylogeny
of multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) of a concatenation of the housekeeping genes
atpD, dnaK, and efp (Bui Thi Ngoc et al. 2010), by using neighbour-joining trees generated
with 500 bootstrap replicates, grouped the two isolates with the X. hortorum pv. carotae
M081 strain (Kimbrel et al. 2011) (GenBank accession numbers: MW161270 and
MW161271 for atpD for the two isolates, respectively; MW161268 and MW161269 for
dnaK; MW161272 and MW161273 for efp). A pairwise identity analysis revealed a 100%
identity between all three isolates. Pathogenicity of the isolates was tested by spray
inoculation (Christianson et al. 2015) with a bacterial suspension (108 CFU/ml) prepared in
sterile distilled water at 3 to 4 true-leaf stage (six plants per isolate). Sterile distilled water
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was used as negative control. The inoculated plants were incubated in a growth chamber
(25°C and 95% relative humidity [RH]) for 72 h, and then transferred to a greenhouse at 24
to 28°C and 65% RH. Characteristic leaf blight symptoms developed on inoculated carrot
plants, while no symptoms were observed on the negative control plants 20 days after
inoculation. The bacterium was re-isolated from symptomatic tissue and the identity
confirmed through PCR analysis. Based on PCR, morphological and phenotypic tests,
sequence analysis, and pathogenicity assays, the isolates were identified as X. hortorum
pv. carotae. To our knowledge, this is the first report of bacterial leaf blight of carrot
caused by X. hortorum pv. carotae in Spain, and the first molecular and pathological
characterization. It is important to early detect this pathogen and take suitable measures to
prevent its spread, since it could cause yield losses for a locally important crop such as
carrot.