First Report of Dickeya fangzhongdai causing soft rot in Orchids in Canada
Dickeya fangzhongdai was originally described as the causal agent of bleeding canker of pear tree in China. Recently, D. fangzhongdai was isolated and identified as the causal agent of soft rot in an orchid plant purchased in a local supermarket in Prince Edward Island, Canada. A water-soaked dark g...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant disease 2021-06 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Dickeya fangzhongdai was originally described as the causal agent of bleeding canker of pear tree in China. Recently, D. fangzhongdai was isolated and identified as the causal agent of soft rot in an orchid plant purchased in a local supermarket in Prince Edward Island, Canada. A water-soaked dark green spot on the leaf surface was observed and later became larger soft rot symptom. The origin of the orchid plants was traced back to a producer in Ontario, Canada who propagated them from with cuttings originally imported from the Netherlands and Taiwan. Bacterial isolations were made from a soft rot lesion on an orchid leaf by surface sterilization of small pieces of marginal tissue of the diseased leaf in 70% alcohol. The small pieces of leaf tissue were then washed three time using sterile water, and immersed in drops of sterile water. Bacterial streaming was observed under the microscope and non-fluorescing bacterial colonies were isolated on King's B and casamino acid-peptone-glucose agar plates and purified as isolates 908, 909, 910 and 911. The DNA samples were extracted from the four isolates, as well as the diseased leaf tissue, and tested by using a qPCR assay with the specific primer/probe set (DfF/DfR/DfP) for D. fangzhongdai (Tian et al. 2020). The assay yielded PCR amplicons of 135 bp with a melting temperature of 86.5±0.6 °C as did two control reactions using genomic DNA from D. fangzhongdai strains JS5T and QZH3 originally isolated in China, providing presumptive identification of the orchid isolates as D. fangzhongdai. To fulfill Koch's postulates, freshly purchased healthy orchid plants (n=4) were inoculated by leaf injection with the bacterial isolates obtained in this study and strains JS5 T and QZH3 at ~107 CFU/ml. Three leaves of the same side of the plants were inoculated with the same strains as triplicates. Sterile water was used as the negative control. Inoculated plants were incubated in a growth chamber with a 16 h photoperiod at 23 °C. Water soaked lesions developed in 3-5 days after inoculation followed by soft rotting in leaves inoculated with the new bacterial strains from orchid plants while strain QZH3 caused soft rot in 10 days after inoculation (Fig. S1). The non-fluorescing bacteria on King's B plates with colony morphology similar to those inoculated were re-isolated from the inoculated leaves and confirmed to be D. fangzhongdai by qPCR. Phylogenetic analysis of the assembled 16S rRNA sequence of isolate 908 (GenBank acce |
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ISSN: | 0191-2917 |
DOI: | 10.1094/PDIS-04-21-0771-PDN |