无症状植原体揭示了一种新的和棘手的感染

Philip Donkersley, F. W. Silva, M. S. Alves, C. M. Carvalho, A. Al-Sadi, S. Elliot
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引用次数: 3

摘要

无症状感染就其性质而言,研究具有挑战性,在广泛的地理范围内监测更加困难,特别是因为方法依赖于昂贵的分子技术。引起石灰女巫帚病(Candidatus Phytoplasma aurantifolia)的植物病原体是整个中东石灰生产的主要限制因素,最近在巴西发现,但没有中东的典型症状。在这里,我们讨论了监测无症状感染的困难,并强调了未来爆发的威胁。无症状感染对了解多年生寄主内病原体的进化具有重要意义。我们使用三种无症状感染模型系统:(i)植物原体,(ii)石灰(Citrus aurantifolia)的细菌感染,(iii)木薯(Manihot esculenta)的“外群”植物原体,以证明不同宿主之间的一致性。我们发现,尽管研究中的所有植物都被故意感染,但检测通常不能证实这一诊断。监测基因表达的新兴技术既可以用于研究与无症状感染相关的新生物学,也可以用于开发监测技术。我们强调了在可能的未来暴发中监测无症状感染的困难,并对了解多年生宿主内病原体的进化具有重要意义。
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Asymptomatic Phytoplasma Reveal a Novel and Troublesome Infection
Asymptomatic infections are by their nature challenging to study and even more difficult to monitor across broad geographical ranges, particularly as methods are reliant on expensive molecular techniques. The plant pathogen that causes Witches’ Broom disease of lime (Candidatus Phytoplasma aurantifolia) is a major limiting factor in lime production across the Middle East and was recently detected in Brazil, but without the typical symptoms from the Middle East. Here, we discuss the difficulty of monitoring asymptomatic infections and highlight the threat posed by highlight future outbreaks. Asymptomatic infections have important implications for understanding the evolution of pathogens within perennial hosts. We use three model systems of asymptomatic infections: (i) a Phytoplasma and (ii) a bacterial infection of lime (Citrus aurantifolia) and (iii) an “out-group” Phytoplasma of Cassava (Manihot esculenta) to demonstrate consistency across divergent hosts. We found that although all plants in the study were intentionally infected, assays typically did not confirm this diagnosis. Emergent technologies monitoring gene expression could be used to both study novel biology associated with asymptomatic infections and develop monitoring technologies. We highlight the difficulty of monitoring asymptomatic infections in possible future outbreaks and have important implications for understanding the evolution of pathogens within perennial hosts.
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