To complete Koch's postulates, detached jujube fruits (cv. Bokjoe) wounded with a razor blade were spot-inoculated with 5 µl of a cell suspension containing 105 cfu/ ml (five fruits per isolate). The fruits were maintained in a plastic box with high humidity at 28ºC. Inoculated surfaces turned brown in 24 hrs followed by internal discoloration within 25 days. Bacteria were reisolated and their identities confirmed by metabolic fingerprinting using the Biolog Microbial Identification System, version 4.2 (Biolog Inc., Hayward, CA, USA), and re-inoculation inoculation of fruits as described above. No symptoms were noted on two fruits inoculated with sterile distilled water (Fig. 2). The gyrB region was partially sequenced to aid in identification of three isolates, BC2927, BC2928 and BC3042, using PCR primers reported by Young et al. (2008). A 860-bp fragment of the gyrB of the three isolates was compared with sequences of the reference strains of the genus Xanthomonas available in the GenBank. The isolates were clustered with X. arboricola pathovars, and clearly separated all the pathovars in a phylogenetic tree generated by the neighbour-joining method in the MEGA software, version 4.1 (Fig. 3) (Tamura et al., 2007).The gyrB sequencefrom the isolates had distance indices of 0.014, 0.017, 0.017, 0.037, 0.013, 0.016, and 0.020, as determined by the Jukes-Cantor model, with sequences of the reference strains of X. arboricola pvs. juglandis, pruni, corylina, populi, celebensis, and the X. arboricola strains from Capsicum spp.(Myung et al., 2010; Young et al., 2008), respectively.On the basis of the sequence, the three isolates were identified as X. arboricola. The disease is named bacterial fruit rot. To our knowledge, this is the first report of bacterial fruit rot of jujube caused by X. arboricola. Further studies are required to determine the pathovar status of the strain. Further spread of the pathogen is expected to have an economic impact on fruit production in Korea. Nucleotide sequence data are available under the following GenBank Accession Nos.: GU120086, GU120087 and GU120085 for gyrB of isolates BC2927, BC2928 and BC3042, respectively.
References
Myung IS, Jeong IH, Moon SY, Lee SW, Shim HS, 2010. A new disease, arboricola leaf spot of bell pepper, caused by Xanthomonas arboricola. Plant Disease 94, 271. [doi:10.1094/PDIS-94-2-0271C]Tamura K, Dudley J, Nei M, Kumar S, 2007. MEGA 4: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis (MEGA) software version 4.0. Molecular Biology and Evolution 24, 1596-1599. [doi:10.1093/molbev/msm092]
Young JM, Park DC, Shearman HM, Fargier E, 2008. A multilocus sequence analysis of the genus Xanthomonas. Systematic and Applied Microbiology 31, 366-377. [doi:10.1016/j.syapm.2008.06.004]
0 comments:
Post a Comment