Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Pathology
2. Center for Microbial Pathogenesis
3. Center for Microbial Ecology
4. Department of Entomology
5. Lyman Briggs College, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Burkholderia cepacia
complex strains are genetically related but phenotypically diverse organisms that are important opportunistic pathogens in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF,) as well as pathogens of onion and banana, colonizers of the rhizospheres of many plant species, and common inhabitants of bulk soil. Genotypic identification and pathogenicity characterization were performed on
B. cepacia
complex isolates from the rhizosphere of onion and organic soils in Michigan. A total of 3,798 putative
B. cepacia
complex isolates were recovered on
Pseudomonas cepacia
azelaic acid tryptamine and trypan blue tetracycline semiselective media during the 2004 growing season from six commercial onion fields located in two counties in Michigan. Putative
B. cepacia
complex isolates were identified by hybridization to a 16S rRNA gene probe, followed by duplex PCR using primers targeted to the 16S rRNA gene and
recA
sequences and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of the
recA
sequence. A total of 1,290 isolates, 980 rhizosphere and 310 soil isolates, were assigned to the species
B. cepacia
(160),
B. cenocepacia
(480),
B. ambifaria
(623), and
B. pyrrocinia
(27). The majority of isolates identified as
B. cepacia
(85%),
B. cenocepacia
(90%), and
B. ambifaria
(76%) were pathogenic in a detached onion bulb scale assay and caused symptoms of water soaking, maceration, and/or necrosis. A phylogenetic analysis of
recA
sequences from representative
B. cepacia
complex type and panel strains, along with isolates collected in this study, revealed that the
B. cenocepacia
isolates associated with onion grouped within the III-B lineage and that some strains were closely related to strain AU1054, which was isolated from a CF patient. This study revealed that multiple
B. cepacia
complex species colonize the onion rhizosphere and have the potential to cause sour skin rot disease of onion. In addition, the onion rhizosphere is a natural habitat and a potential environmental source of
B. cenocepacia
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
66 articles.
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