Intraspecific Genomic Variation Within Xanthomonas albilineans, the Sugarcane Leaf Scald Pathogen
Open Access
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- Published by Scientific Societies in Phytopathology®
- Vol. 87 (3) , 316-324
- https://doi.org/10.1094/phyto.1997.87.3.316
Abstract
To better understand the nature of recent outbreaks of leaf scald disease of sugarcane in a number of sugarcane production regions of the world including Florida, Guadeloupe, Louisiana, Mauritius, Taiwan, and Texas, a study of the worldwide genetic variation of the pathogen was undertaken. A total of 218 strains from 31 geographic locations were examined. Genomic DNA of each strain was digested with the rare cutting restriction enzyme SpeI, and the fragments were separated by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). A total of 102 bands were identified, and 54 different DNA banding patterns (haplotypes) were observed. Eight groups of banding patterns, designated PFGE groups A through H, were consistently detected by visual, principal component, and cluster analyses. Five groups were comprised of multiple haplotypes representing numerous strains, and three were comprised of single haplotypes representing one strain each. The leaf scald outbreaks in Florida, Louisiana, Texas, and possibly Guadeloupe and Taiwan could be attributed to the introduction of strains belonging to PFGE group B. When infection by two strains each of the newly introduced strains (PFGE group B) and those previously present in Florida (PFGE group A) was analyzed in 22 sugarcane cultivars by reisolation 24 weeks after inoculation, a significantly greater mean frequency was detected for PFGE group B strains and no cultivar by PFGE group interaction was observed. Inadvertent dispersal of the pathogen among plants, possibly by means of aerosols or splashing water, was detected in a subsequent experiment. Strains of PFGE group B were recovered from the internal tissues of some plants inoculated with PFGE group A strains and were also found to be epiphytic colonizers of nonsymptomatic, noninoculated plants adjacent to the inoculated plants; whereas strains of PFGE group A were recovered only from plants that had been inoculated with them. Thus, the possibility became more apparent that strain variation might be associated, at least in part, with factors governing plant-to-plant spread of the pathogen in nature.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Leaf scald (Xanthomonas albilineans) incidence and its effect on yield in seven sugarcane cultivars in GuadeloupePlant Pathology, 1995
- First Report of Leaf Scald, Caused byXanthomonas albilineans,of Sugarcane in Texas.Plant Disease, 1995
- First Report of Leaf Scald of Sugarcane(Xanthomonas albilineans)in GuatemalaPlant Disease, 1995
- Evaluation of Selective Media and Immunoassays for Detection ofXanthomonas albilineans,Causal Agent of Sugarcane Leaf Scald DiseasePlant Disease, 1994
- Population Dynamics ofXanthomonas albilineansin Sugarcane Plants as Determined with an Antibiotic-Resistant MutantPlant Disease, 1994
- Sugarcane Leaf Scald Distribution, Symptomatology, and Effect on Yield in LouisianaPlant Disease, 1994
- First Report of Leaf Scald, Caused byXanthomonas albilineans,of Sugarcane in MexicoPlant Disease, 1993
- First Report of Leaf Scald, Caused byXanthomonas albilineans,of Sugarcane in LouisianaPlant Disease, 1993
- Outbreak of Leaf Scald of Sugarcane, Caused byXanthomonas albilineans,in FloridaPlant Disease, 1992
- Measures of the Amount of Ecologic Association Between SpeciesEcology, 1945