New plant hosts for group
16SrII, 'Candidatus Phytoplasma aurantifolia', in
India
Y. Arocha 1,2*, A. Singh 3, M. Pandey 3, A.N. Tripathi 3, B. Chandra 3, S.K Shukla 3, Y. Singh 3, A. Kumar 3, R.K. Srivastava 3, N.W. Zaidi 3, M. Arif 3, S. Narwal 3, A.K. Tewari 3, M.K. Gupta 4, P.D. Nath 5, R. Rabindran 6, S.K. Khirbat 7, A.S. Byadgi 8, G. Singh 9 and E. Boa 10
1 National Centre for Animal and Plant Health (CENSA), Apdo 10. San José de Las Lajas, Havana, Cuba 2 Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, UK 3 Govind Ballabh Pant University of Agriculture & Technology, Pantnagar, India 4 Central Agricultural University, India 5 Assam Agricultural University, India 6 Tamil Nadu Agricultural University, India 7 Haryama Agricultural University, India 8 University of Agricultural Sciences 9 SVB Patel University of Agriculture & Technology, India 10 Global Plant Clinic, CABI, UK.
Accepted: 27 Jun 2008
Lettuce (Lactuca sativa), carrot (Daucus
carota)
and French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) are
important staple food crops in India. Symptoms of leaf yellowing, chlorosis, and
little leaf were recently observed in orchards of such plant species at the
Vegetable Research Center, GBPUA&T, Uttarakhand, Pantnagar, India. Plants of Amaranthus
sp. growing in the hedges of orchards were exhibiting leaf yellowing
symptoms. Three leaf samples of each symptomatic plant species were collected,
including healthy looking plants. Total DNA was extracted and indexed in a
nested PCR assay with universal primers R16mF2/R1 and fU5/rU3 that target the
phytoplasma 16S rRNA. PCR amplicons (880 bp) were produced in all symptomatic
samples, but not in the symptomless ones. PCR products were subjected to RFLP
analyses with RsaI and
HpaII
restriction enzymes, and further purified, cloned (pGEM-T Easy Vector, Promega),
and sequenced in both directions using M13 forward and reverse sequencing
primers (www.dnaseq.co.uk).
The 16S rRNA sequences were compared with those of reference strains from
GenBank using BLAST, and aligned with Clustal W (Thompson et al., 1994)
to produce a phylogenetic tree using the neighbour-joining method and 1000
replicates with MEGA 3.1 (Kumar et al., 2004).
RFLP profiles were all similar to
those of group 16SrII, 'Candidatus
Phytoplasma aurantifolia'. Sequences
of phytoplasmas (GenBank) identified in lettuce (EU362630), carrot (EU362628),
French bean (EU362629) and Amaranthus sp. (EU362627) shared 99% identity
to each other, and to a member of group 16SrII, 'Candidatus Phytoplasma
aurantifolia' (EU099570). Phylogeny supported RFLP results and sequence
comparisons (Fig. 1), and indicates that the Pantnagar phytoplasmas cluster in
the 16SrII group branch more closely related to the cactus witches' broom
phytoplasma. 'Ca. Phytoplasma aurantifolia' has been previously reported
in acid lime in India (Ghosh et al., 1999) and chickpea (Ghanekar et
al., 1988). However to our knowledge this is the first record of a 16SrII
phytoplasma isolate in lettuce, carrot, French bean, and Amaranthus sp.
in this country.
Acknowledgements
Work in the UK was done under Defra licence No.
PHF 174D/5185(08/2005). Sequencing was done by the Sequencing Service (School of
Life Sciences, University of Dundee, Scotland, www.dnaseq.co.uk) using Applied
Biosystems Big-Dye Ver 3·1 chemistry on an Applied Biosystems model 3730
automated capillary DNA sequencer.
References
Ghanekar AM, Manohar SK, Reddy SV,
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Ghosh DK, Das AK, Shayam S, Singh SJ, Ahlawat
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evolutionary genetics analysis and sequence alignment. Brief Bioinformatics5, 150-63.
Thompson JD,
Higgins DG, Gibson TJ, 1994. Clustal W: improving the sensitivity of progressive
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This report was formally published in Plant Pathology