Affiliation:
1. Laboratorium voor Microbiologie, Universiteit Gent, B-9000 Ghent,1 and
2. Institute for Forestry and Game Management (IBW), B-9500 Geraardsbergen,2 Belgium
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The watermark disease, caused by
Brenneria salicis
(formerly
Erwinia salicis
), is of significant concern wherever tree-forming willows are grown or occur naturally. The movement of infected, asymptomatic cuttings is a major cause of pathogen dispersal. A reliable and sensitive diagnostic procedure is necessary for the safe movement of willow planting material. We derived primers from the nucleotide sequence of the 16S rRNA gene of
B. salicis
for the development of a PCR to detect this pathogen. One set of primers, Es1a-Es4b, directed the amplification of a 553-bp fragment from
B. salicis
genomic DNA as well as
B. salicis
cells. PCR products were not observed when genomic DNA was tested for 27 strains of other, related plant-associated bacteria. Genomic fingerprinting by amplification fragment length polymorphism of
B. salicis
strains, originating from four different countries, and related
Brenneria
,
Pectobacterium
, and
Erwinia
strains revealed a very high similarity among the
B. salicis
genomes, indicating that the spread of the pathogen is mainly due to the transportation of infected cuttings. The PCR had to be preceded by a DNA extraction in order to detect the pathogen in the vascular fluid of willows. The minimum number of cells that could be detected from vascular fluid was 20 CFU/ml. The PCR assays proved to be very sensitive and reliable in detecting
B. salicis
in willow plant material.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
19 articles.
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