Emma Marie Treadwell Deuitch, Suzanne Rooney-Latham, Cheryl L Blomquist, Wei Hao Belisle, Marinell C Soriano, Niklaus Grunwald
{"title":"美国杨梅‘Marina’叶斑病的疫霉病初报。","authors":"Emma Marie Treadwell Deuitch, Suzanne Rooney-Latham, Cheryl L Blomquist, Wei Hao Belisle, Marinell C Soriano, Niklaus Grunwald","doi":"10.1094/PDIS-11-24-2379-PDN","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The Marina strawberry tree (<i>Arbutus × reyorum</i> Demoly. 'Marina') is a popular ornamental tree species, prized for its glossy evergreen foliage, display of pink and white bell-shaped blooms, and strawberry-like ornamental fruits. In April 2024, a foliar sample from a Humboldt County, California nursery, where <i>P. ramorum</i> had been detected earlier in the year, was submitted to the CDFA Plant Pest Diagnostic Laboratory exhibiting symptoms of marginal leaf necrosis (Fig. S1). A limited number of symptomatic strawberry trees were located near infected <i>Cornus capitata</i> plants. Six 6-mm-diameter disks were excised from the margins of diseased leaf tissues and cultured on semi-selective CMA-PARP media (Jeffers and Martin 1986). After approximately 7 days, white, coralloid, and coenocytic hyphae interspersed with globose chlamydospores (22.5 to 52.3 µm in diameter, n = 30), and ellipsoidal, semi-papillate sporangia (32.5 to 75 × 20 to 22.5 µm, n = 30) grew from the disks. This morphology is consistent with that reported for <i>P. ramorum</i>. The pathogen was genetically identified by sequencing the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) and cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 region (cox1) using the primers ITS5/ITS4 (White et al. 1990; accession no. PQ431562) and OomCox1Levup/Fm85mod (Robideau et al. 2011; accession no. PQ438384), respectively. A BLAST search of both amplicons revealed 100% identity with the <i>P. ramorum</i> ex-type strain CPHST BL 55G (MG865581 and MH136973). Based on microsatellite loci, the isolate was placed within the NA2 clonal lineage (Goss et al. 2011). Koch's postulates were performed to confirm pathogenicity using 4-year-old <i>Arbutus × reyorum</i> 'Marina' trees (58 to 75 cm tall) grown in 3.78-liter pots. The foliage of three plants was inoculated with 15 ml of a zoospore suspension of 1 × 104 zoospores/ml following the methods of Blomquist et al. (2021). Two control plants were sprayed with 15 ml of sterile water. All plants were placed in a dew chamber at 23°C. After three days, plants were moved to a growth chamber at 23±1°C with a 12-h photoperiod. During this time, black discoloration was noted on the youngest leaves of the inoculated plants. After approximately 7 days, symptoms characteristic of <i>Phytophthora</i> infection were observed including drooping leaves, dieback, and dark foliar lesions extending from the petiole along the midrib into the leaf. By 13 days, the discoloration extended into the flower panicles (Fig. S2). These symptoms differed from those in the original nursery samples, which only displayed lesions along the leaf margins. Both the marginal necrosis in the submitted samples and the symptoms from the pathogenicity tests are consistent with ramorum leaf blight on many hosts under varying environmental conditions. <i>P. ramorum</i> was consistently isolated from symptomatic foliage of the inoculated plants, while no symptoms were observed in the control group and no <i>Phytophthora</i> was isolated. Although <i>Arbutus unedo</i> and <i>A. menziesii</i> are known hosts for <i>P. ramorum</i> (Farr and Rossman 2024), to our knowledge, this represents the first report of <i>P. ramorum</i> infecting <i>Arbutus × reyorum</i> 'Marina'. <i>P. ramorum</i> is a devastating pathogen affecting numerous plants across diverse environments. The identification of this popular landscape plant as a new host will increase the already extensive time required to inspect for <i>P. ramorum</i> in nurseries and may limit its usage in the wildland-urban interface, particularly in areas where <i>P. ramorum</i> is present in nearby forests.</p>","PeriodicalId":20063,"journal":{"name":"Plant disease","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":4.4000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"First Report of <i>Phytophthora ramorum</i> Causing Leaf Spot on <i>Arbutus × reyorum</i> 'Marina' in the United States.\",\"authors\":\"Emma Marie Treadwell Deuitch, Suzanne Rooney-Latham, Cheryl L Blomquist, Wei Hao Belisle, Marinell C Soriano, Niklaus Grunwald\",\"doi\":\"10.1094/PDIS-11-24-2379-PDN\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The Marina strawberry tree (<i>Arbutus × reyorum</i> Demoly. 'Marina') is a popular ornamental tree species, prized for its glossy evergreen foliage, display of pink and white bell-shaped blooms, and strawberry-like ornamental fruits. In April 2024, a foliar sample from a Humboldt County, California nursery, where <i>P. ramorum</i> had been detected earlier in the year, was submitted to the CDFA Plant Pest Diagnostic Laboratory exhibiting symptoms of marginal leaf necrosis (Fig. S1). A limited number of symptomatic strawberry trees were located near infected <i>Cornus capitata</i> plants. Six 6-mm-diameter disks were excised from the margins of diseased leaf tissues and cultured on semi-selective CMA-PARP media (Jeffers and Martin 1986). After approximately 7 days, white, coralloid, and coenocytic hyphae interspersed with globose chlamydospores (22.5 to 52.3 µm in diameter, n = 30), and ellipsoidal, semi-papillate sporangia (32.5 to 75 × 20 to 22.5 µm, n = 30) grew from the disks. This morphology is consistent with that reported for <i>P. ramorum</i>. The pathogen was genetically identified by sequencing the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) and cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 region (cox1) using the primers ITS5/ITS4 (White et al. 1990; accession no. PQ431562) and OomCox1Levup/Fm85mod (Robideau et al. 2011; accession no. PQ438384), respectively. A BLAST search of both amplicons revealed 100% identity with the <i>P. ramorum</i> ex-type strain CPHST BL 55G (MG865581 and MH136973). Based on microsatellite loci, the isolate was placed within the NA2 clonal lineage (Goss et al. 2011). Koch's postulates were performed to confirm pathogenicity using 4-year-old <i>Arbutus × reyorum</i> 'Marina' trees (58 to 75 cm tall) grown in 3.78-liter pots. The foliage of three plants was inoculated with 15 ml of a zoospore suspension of 1 × 104 zoospores/ml following the methods of Blomquist et al. (2021). Two control plants were sprayed with 15 ml of sterile water. All plants were placed in a dew chamber at 23°C. After three days, plants were moved to a growth chamber at 23±1°C with a 12-h photoperiod. During this time, black discoloration was noted on the youngest leaves of the inoculated plants. After approximately 7 days, symptoms characteristic of <i>Phytophthora</i> infection were observed including drooping leaves, dieback, and dark foliar lesions extending from the petiole along the midrib into the leaf. By 13 days, the discoloration extended into the flower panicles (Fig. S2). These symptoms differed from those in the original nursery samples, which only displayed lesions along the leaf margins. Both the marginal necrosis in the submitted samples and the symptoms from the pathogenicity tests are consistent with ramorum leaf blight on many hosts under varying environmental conditions. <i>P. ramorum</i> was consistently isolated from symptomatic foliage of the inoculated plants, while no symptoms were observed in the control group and no <i>Phytophthora</i> was isolated. Although <i>Arbutus unedo</i> and <i>A. menziesii</i> are known hosts for <i>P. ramorum</i> (Farr and Rossman 2024), to our knowledge, this represents the first report of <i>P. ramorum</i> infecting <i>Arbutus × reyorum</i> 'Marina'. <i>P. ramorum</i> is a devastating pathogen affecting numerous plants across diverse environments. The identification of this popular landscape plant as a new host will increase the already extensive time required to inspect for <i>P. ramorum</i> in nurseries and may limit its usage in the wildland-urban interface, particularly in areas where <i>P. ramorum</i> is present in nearby forests.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":20063,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Plant disease\",\"volume\":\" \",\"pages\":\"\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":4.4000,\"publicationDate\":\"2025-02-09\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Plant disease\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"97\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-11-24-2379-PDN\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"农林科学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"PLANT SCIENCES\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Plant disease","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-11-24-2379-PDN","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PLANT SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
玛丽娜草莓树(Arbutus × reyorum demoy)。“Marina”是一种受欢迎的观赏树种,因其光滑的常绿叶子,粉红色和白色的钟形花朵以及草莓状的观赏果实而备受赞誉。2024年4月,来自加利福尼亚州洪堡县苗圃的叶片样本被提交给CDFA植物害虫诊断实验室,该苗圃在今年早些时候检测到拉蔓枯病菌,显示出边缘叶片坏死的症状(图S1)。少量有症状的草莓树位于受感染的山茱萸植株附近。从患病叶片组织边缘切除6个直径为6mm的圆盘,在半选择性CMA-PARP培养基上培养(Jeffers和Martin 1986)。大约7天后,白色、珊瑚状和囊胞菌丝散布着球形衣原体孢子(直径22.5至52.3µm, n = 30),椭圆形、半乳头状孢子囊(直径32.5至75 × 20至22.5µm, n = 30)从圆盘上生长出来。这一形态与文献报道的雷公藤一致。利用引物ITS5/ITS4对病原菌内部转录间隔区(ITS)和细胞色素氧化酶亚基1区(cox1)进行测序鉴定(White et al. 1990;加入不。PQ431562)和OomCox1Levup/Fm85mod (Robideau et al. 2011;加入不。分别PQ438384)。BLAST搜索结果显示,这两个扩增子与疟原虫前型菌株CPHST BL 55G (MG865581和MH136973)的同源性为100%。根据微卫星位点,将分离物置于NA2克隆谱系中(Goss et al. 2011)。使用生长在3.78升花盆中的4年杨梅× reyorum 'Marina树(58至75厘米高),执行Koch的假设来确认致病性。参照Blomquist et al.(2021)的方法,用1 × 104个游动孢子/ml的游动孢子悬浮液15 ml接种3株植物的叶片。用15毫升无菌水喷洒两株对照植株。所有植物置于23°C的露室中。3天后,将植株移入23±1℃的生长室,光周期为12 h。在此期间,接种植株最年轻的叶子上出现了黑色的变色。大约7天后,观察到疫霉菌感染的典型症状,包括叶片下垂、枯死和从叶柄沿中脉延伸到叶片的深色叶损。到第13天,变色扩展到花穗(图S2)。这些症状不同于那些在原始苗圃样品,其中只显示沿叶边缘病变。在不同的环境条件下,样品的边缘坏死和致病性试验的症状与许多寄主的小斑叶枯病一致。接种植株有症状的叶片中均可分离到ramorum,而对照组无症状,未分离到疫霉菌。虽然杨梅(Arbutus unedo)和A. menziesii是已知的ramorum的宿主(Farr和Rossman 2024),但据我们所知,这是第一次报道ramorum感染杨梅(Arbutus x reyorum 'Marina)。雷氏假单胞菌是一种影响多种环境中许多植物的破坏性病原体。这种受欢迎的景观植物作为新的寄主的确定将增加在苗圃中检测黑桫椤所需的大量时间,并可能限制其在荒地-城市界面的使用,特别是在黑桫椤存在于附近森林的地区。
First Report of Phytophthora ramorum Causing Leaf Spot on Arbutus × reyorum 'Marina' in the United States.
The Marina strawberry tree (Arbutus × reyorum Demoly. 'Marina') is a popular ornamental tree species, prized for its glossy evergreen foliage, display of pink and white bell-shaped blooms, and strawberry-like ornamental fruits. In April 2024, a foliar sample from a Humboldt County, California nursery, where P. ramorum had been detected earlier in the year, was submitted to the CDFA Plant Pest Diagnostic Laboratory exhibiting symptoms of marginal leaf necrosis (Fig. S1). A limited number of symptomatic strawberry trees were located near infected Cornus capitata plants. Six 6-mm-diameter disks were excised from the margins of diseased leaf tissues and cultured on semi-selective CMA-PARP media (Jeffers and Martin 1986). After approximately 7 days, white, coralloid, and coenocytic hyphae interspersed with globose chlamydospores (22.5 to 52.3 µm in diameter, n = 30), and ellipsoidal, semi-papillate sporangia (32.5 to 75 × 20 to 22.5 µm, n = 30) grew from the disks. This morphology is consistent with that reported for P. ramorum. The pathogen was genetically identified by sequencing the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) and cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 region (cox1) using the primers ITS5/ITS4 (White et al. 1990; accession no. PQ431562) and OomCox1Levup/Fm85mod (Robideau et al. 2011; accession no. PQ438384), respectively. A BLAST search of both amplicons revealed 100% identity with the P. ramorum ex-type strain CPHST BL 55G (MG865581 and MH136973). Based on microsatellite loci, the isolate was placed within the NA2 clonal lineage (Goss et al. 2011). Koch's postulates were performed to confirm pathogenicity using 4-year-old Arbutus × reyorum 'Marina' trees (58 to 75 cm tall) grown in 3.78-liter pots. The foliage of three plants was inoculated with 15 ml of a zoospore suspension of 1 × 104 zoospores/ml following the methods of Blomquist et al. (2021). Two control plants were sprayed with 15 ml of sterile water. All plants were placed in a dew chamber at 23°C. After three days, plants were moved to a growth chamber at 23±1°C with a 12-h photoperiod. During this time, black discoloration was noted on the youngest leaves of the inoculated plants. After approximately 7 days, symptoms characteristic of Phytophthora infection were observed including drooping leaves, dieback, and dark foliar lesions extending from the petiole along the midrib into the leaf. By 13 days, the discoloration extended into the flower panicles (Fig. S2). These symptoms differed from those in the original nursery samples, which only displayed lesions along the leaf margins. Both the marginal necrosis in the submitted samples and the symptoms from the pathogenicity tests are consistent with ramorum leaf blight on many hosts under varying environmental conditions. P. ramorum was consistently isolated from symptomatic foliage of the inoculated plants, while no symptoms were observed in the control group and no Phytophthora was isolated. Although Arbutus unedo and A. menziesii are known hosts for P. ramorum (Farr and Rossman 2024), to our knowledge, this represents the first report of P. ramorum infecting Arbutus × reyorum 'Marina'. P. ramorum is a devastating pathogen affecting numerous plants across diverse environments. The identification of this popular landscape plant as a new host will increase the already extensive time required to inspect for P. ramorum in nurseries and may limit its usage in the wildland-urban interface, particularly in areas where P. ramorum is present in nearby forests.
期刊介绍:
Plant Disease is the leading international journal for rapid reporting of research on new, emerging, and established plant diseases. The journal publishes papers that describe basic and applied research focusing on practical aspects of disease diagnosis, development, and management.