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1.
Plant Dis ; 2022 May 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35536215

RESUMO

In Puerto Rico, the agricultural production of pineapple (Ananas comosus (L.) Merr.) comprises nearly 5,000 tons harvested annually from over 250 ha (USDA 2018). With an annual income of approximately $3 million USD, pineapple ranks fourth in importance among Puerto Rican crops (USDA 2018). Recently, the pineapple industry on the island underwent a change from growing a local cultivar known as "Cabezona" to cultivar MD2, introduced from Hawaii around 1996 (SEA 2015), because this cultivar produces fruit more than once during a single growing season. In August 2018 (when the rainy season normally starts in Puerto Rico), soft rot symptoms appeared at commercial fields in Manatí (WGS 84 Lat 18.42694, Lng -66.44779) and persisted through 2019. Symptoms observed in the field included foliar water-soaked lesions with gas-filled blisters, especially at the base of the leaf. Leaves exhibited brown discoloration and a fetid odor (rot) at the basal portion of the plant. Finally, leaves collapsed at the center of the pineapple crown, effectively killing the apex and preventing the fruit from developing. Disease incidence ranged from 25% to 40% depending on the weather and season; when there was more rain, there was higher disease incidence. Symptomatic leaves were collected in February 2019, disinfected with 70% ethanol, and rinsed with sterile distilled water. Tissue sections (5mm2) were placed in nutrient agar. Bacterial colony-forming units (CFU) were a translucent cream color, circular, with a flat convex surface and wavy edge. Biochemical analysis showed that bacteria were Gram-negative, oxidase positive, catalase positive, and facultatively anaerobic. Pathogenicity was tested on leaves of one-and-a-half-year-old pineapple seedlings in humid chambers. Bacteria were grown on sterile nutrient agar for 3 days at 25 ± 2°C. Inoculation assays (three replications) were performed using 1X108 CFU/ml of bacteria suspended in sterile water and applied with a cotton swab to leaves wounded with a needle. The inoculated tissue was incubated at 28°C and kept in a dark environment. Negative controls were inoculated with sterile water. Five days after inoculation, foliar water-soaked lesions were observed, followed by the formation of brown leaf tissue and gas-filled blisters, the same symptoms observed in the field. A partial DNA sequence of the 16S rRNA gene of the bacterial isolate and the re-isolated bacteria were amplified using primers 27F and 1492R (Lane et al. 1985) and sequenced. The isolate was determined to the genus Dickeya through a BLAST® search against sequences available in the database of the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). This partial 16S rRNA sequence of the bacterial isolate was deposited in GenBank® at NCBI (Accession no. MT672704). To determine the identity of the Dickeya species, we sequenced the genes dnaA, gyrB, dnaX, and recN (Marrero et al. 2013) for the bacterial isolate (GenBank accession nos. OM276852, OM276853, OM276854, and OM276855) and conducted a Multilocus Sequence Analysis including reference Dickeya sequences of Marrero et al., 2013. The Phylogenetic analysis (using WinClada) resolved the Puerto Rican isolate as belonging to a clade broadly ascribable to D. zeae, most closely related to strains isolated from earlier Hawaiian pineapple bacterial heart rot outbreaks. Dickeya zeae was responsible for bacterial heart rot of pineapple in Malaysia and was later reported as the causal agent for outbreaks in Costa Rica and Hawaii (Kaneshiro et al. 2008; Sueno et al. 2014; Ramachandran et al. 2015). D. zeae had not previously been reported as causing bacterial heart rot in pineapples in Puerto Rico and this study points to a close relationship with strains first detected in Hawaii and which should further be explored to determine the precise nature of this relationship. This information should facilitate the adoption of effective control measures for this disease on the island, promote more effective methods of preventing future introductions of pathogens, and encourage further investigations into the occurrence of D. zeae on the island.

2.
Plant Dis ; 103(11): 2714-2732, 2019 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31560599

RESUMO

Among the biotic constraints of common mushroom (Agaricus bisporus) production, bacterial blotch is considered the most important mushroom disease in terms of global prevalence and economic impact. Etiology and management of bacterial blotch has been a major concern since its original description in 1915. Although Pseudomonas tolaasii is thought to be the main causal agent, various Pseudomonas species, as well as organisms from other genera have been reported to cause blotch symptoms on mushroom caps. In this review, we provide an updated overview on the etiology, epidemiology, and management strategies of bacterial blotch disease. First, diversity of the causal agent(s) and utility of high throughput sequencing-based approaches in the precise characterization and identification of blotch pathogen(s) is explained. Further, due to the limited options for use of conventional pesticides in mushroom farms against blotch pathogen(s), we highlight the role of balanced threshold of relative humidity and temperature in mushroom farms to combat the disease in organic and conventional production. Additionally, we discuss the possibility of the use of biological control agents (either antagonistic mushroom-associated bacterial strains or bacteriophages) for blotch management as one of the sustainable approaches for 21st century agriculture. Finally, we aim to elucidate the association of mushroom microbiome in cap development and productivity on one hand, and blotch incidence/outbreaks on the other hand.


Assuntos
Agaricus , Microbiologia de Alimentos , Pseudomonas , Microbiologia de Alimentos/tendências
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