Affiliation:
1. Department
of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of
California, Berkeley, California 94720
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Xylella
fastidiosa
is a xylem-limited bacterium that causes various
diseases, among them Pierce's disease of grapevine (PD) and almond
leaf scorch (ALS). PD and ALS have long been considered to be caused by
the same strain of this pathogen, but recent genetic studies have
revealed differences among
X. fastidiosa
isolated from these
host plants. We tested the hypothesis that ALS is caused by PD and ALS
strains in the field and found that both groups of
X.
fastidiosa
caused ALS and overwintered within almonds after
mechanical inoculation. Under greenhouse conditions, all isolates
caused ALS and all isolates from grapes caused PD. However, isolates
belonging to almond genetic groupings did not cause PD in inoculated
grapes but systemically infected grapes with lower frequency and
populations than those belonging to grape strains. Isolates able to
cause both PD and ALS developed 10-fold-higher concentrations of
X.
fastidiosa
in grapes than in almonds. In the laboratory, isolates
from grapes overwintered with higher efficiency in grapes than in
almonds and isolates from almonds overwintered better in almonds than
in grapes. We assigned strains from almonds into groups I and II on the
basis of their genetic characteristics, growth on PD3 solid medium, and
bacterial populations within inoculated grapevines. Our results show
that genetically distinct strains from grapes and almonds differ in
population behavior and pathogenicity in grapes and in the ability to
grow on two different
media.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
110 articles.
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