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Multilocus Gene Analyses Indicate Tamarix aphylla as Reservoir Host of Diverse Phytoplasmas Associated with Witches' Broom and Yellowing Symptomatology.

Seyyed Alireza Esmaeilzadeh-HosseiniGhobad BabaeiFrancesco PaciniAssunta Bertaccini
Published in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Tamarisk witches' broom, yellowing, and little leaf symptoms were observed during 2018-2023 surveys of rural deserts in central regions of Iran with the highest disease incidence up to 72% in Chah Afzal (Yazd province). A verification of the presence and identity of phytoplasmas associated with these symptoms was then performed. Tamarisk tree branch cuttings obtained from symptomatic plants sprouted up to 90.3% but with 15-25 days' delay compared to the asymptomatic ones and showed internode shortening and witches' broom, while the branch cuttings from asymptomatic plants had normal growth and sprouted up to 97.8%. Phytoplasma transmission by dodder bridges to periwinkle did not succeed, while nested polymerase chain reaction on the phytoplasma ribosomal gene followed by RFLP and phylogenetic analyses revealed the presence of ' Candidatus Phytoplasma asteris', ' Ca . P. australasiae=australasiaticum', and ' Ca . P. trifolii' (ribosomal subgroups 16SrI-B, 16SrII-D, and 16SrVI-A, respectively) in the samples from symptomatic plants only. Further amplifications were performed on selected phytoplasma-positive samples on tuf and secA genes, and the produced sequences indicated the presence of mixed phytoplasma infection in some of the samples. In particular, in the tuf gene, a mixed infection of ' Ca . P. australasiae=australasiaticum' and ' Ca . P. trifolii' was detected, while in the secA gene, the presence of ' Ca . P. asteris' or ' Ca . P. tritici' strains was identified. The first-time detection of diverse phytoplasma strains in symptomatic T. aphylla suggests that this species represent a relevant source of infection for the agricultural crops and for landscape plants especially when temperature allows insect vector transmission, and therefore, it represents a risk in every environment especially in the frame of climatic changes.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • genome wide identification
  • copy number
  • protein kinase
  • escherichia coli
  • south africa
  • climate change
  • dna methylation
  • risk factors
  • risk assessment
  • cross sectional
  • genetic diversity
  • label free