Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Quality, Bulb Research Centre, 2160 AB Lisse,1 and
2. Department of Molecular Microbiology, IMBW/BCA Faculty of Biology, Vrije Universiteit, 1081 HV Amsterdam,2 The Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A sensitive and specific detection method was developed for
Xanthomonas hyacinthi
; this method was based on amplification of a subsequence of the type IV fimbrial-subunit gene
fimA
from strain S148. The
fimA
gene was amplified by PCR with degenerate DNA primers designed by using the N-terminal and C-terminal amino acid sequences of trypsin fragments of FimA. The nucleotide sequence of
fimA
was determined and compared with the nucleotide sequences coding for the fimbrial subunits in other type IV fimbria-producing bacteria, such as
Xanthomonas campestris
pv. vesicatoria,
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
, and
Moraxella bovis
. In a PCR internal primers JAAN and JARA, designed by using the nucleotide sequences of the variable central and C-terminal region of
fimA
, amplified a 226-bp DNA fragment in all
X. hyacinthi
isolates. This PCR was shown to be pathovar specific, as assessed by testing 71
Xanthomonas
pathovars and bacterial isolates belonging to other genera, such as
Erwinia
and
Pseudomonas
. Southern hybridization experiments performed with the labelled 226-bp DNA amplicon as a probe suggested that there is only one structural type IV fimbrial-gene cluster in
X. hyacinthi
. Only two
Xanthomonas translucens
pathovars cross-reacted weakly in PCR. Primers amplifying a subsequence of the
fimA
gene of
X. campestris
pv. vesicatoria (T. Ojanen-Reuhs, N. Kalkkinen, B. Westerlund-Wikström, J. van Doorn, K. Haahtela, E.-L. Nurmiaho-Lassila, K. Wengelink, U. Bonas, and T. K. Korhonen, J. Bacteriol. 179: 1280–1290, 1997) were shown to be pathovar specific, indicating that the fimbrial-subunit sequences are more generally applicable in xanthomonads for detection purposes. Under laboratory conditions, approximately 1,000 CFU of
X. hyacinthi
per ml could be detected. In inoculated leaves of hyacinths the threshold was 5,000 CFU/ml. The results indicated that infected hyacinths with early symptoms could be successfully screened for
X. hyacinthi
with PCR.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology