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Genetic and phenotypic characterization of Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. maculifoliigardeniae causing bacterial leaf spot of Ixora in Taiwan
Author(s) -
Lin YingRu,
Lee Shin,
Lu ChihHung,
Chu ChiaChing
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of phytopathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.53
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1439-0434
pISSN - 0931-1785
DOI - 10.1111/jph.12912
Subject(s) - biology , leaf spot , housekeeping gene , xanthomonas , pathogen , microbiology and biotechnology , bacteria , rpob , streptomycin , inoculation , botany , gene , horticulture , genetics , antibiotics , 16s ribosomal rna , gene expression
Abstract Ixora spp. are Rubiaceae plants commonly planted as hedges or potted flower. Recently, incidents of bacterial leaf spot of Ixora were observed in central parts of Taiwan. Previous research on the disease has been scarce and focused mainly on its diagnosis. Therefore, many characteristics of the causal agent remain unclear. The present study aims to improve our understanding of this lesser‐characterized pathogen and provide information useful for its identification and management. Bacterial strains Ixo1, Ixo2 and Ixo3 were isolated from infected Ixora x westii . All three isolates were able to grow and induce leaf spot symptoms on Ixora . They also exhibited morphological and physiological characteristics typical of Xanthomonads. Biolog analysis indicated that Ixo1 to Ixo3 have metabolic fingerprints similar to X . axonopodis pv. poinsettiicola . Multilocus sequence analysis and inoculation assays identified Ixo1 to Ixo3 as X. axonopodis pv . maculifoliigardeniae , albeit their gene sequences were very similar to other species/pathovars belonging to the X . euvesicatoria species complex; members of this species complex have different plant hosts, yet share similar housekeeping gene sequences. A semi‐specific PCR assay evaluated in this work was able to differentiate Ixo1 to Ixo3 from bacteria not belonging to the X . euvesicatoria species complex, suggesting that the assay may be used in diagnosing bacterial leaf spot of ixoras. Finally, the sensitivity of the isolated pathogen to multiple commercial pesticides was tested, and the results showed that the bacterium is sensitive to streptomycin + tetracycline (10 SP), thiophanate methyl + streptomycin (68.8 WP) and oxolinic acid (20% WP), but more tolerant against copper‐based chemicals. Overall, the findings from this work may facilitate the identification and management of X. axonopodis pv . maculifoliigardeniae .

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