New Disease Reports (2009) 19, 69.

First report of a 16SrIII, X-disease phytoplasma affecting tomato plants in Mexico

R. Tapia-Tussell 1, A. Suaste-Dzul 1, A. Cortés-Velázquez 1, A. Quijano-Ramayo 1, R. Martín-Mex 1, A. Nexticapan-Garcez 1, I. Córdova-Lara 2, L. Sáenz-Carbonell 2 and D. Pérez-Brito 1*

*daisypb@cicy.mx

Show affiliations

Accepted: 30 Aug 2009

Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is an important crop in Mexico, widely used for fresh consumption. Recently, symptoms of leaf yellowing and curling, little leaf, and severe stunting (Fig. 1) have been observed in tomato fields in the Yucatan Peninsula, with an incidence of about 50%. Leaf samples of fifty plants with and without symptoms were randomly collected in seven different municipal areas of the region. Total DNA was extracted and used as template in a nested PCR assay to amplify the phytoplasma 16S rRNA gene using universal phytoplasma primers P1/P7 (Deng & Hiruki, 1991) and R16F2/R16R2 (Gundersen & Lee, 1996). Bands of expected size (1.26 kb) were produced in all symptom-bearing samples, but not for the symptomless ones, which, after RFLP analysis, yielded identical AluI, HaeIII, HindIII, MseI, MspI, RsaI and TaqI restriction profiles, similar to those of phytoplasmas of group 16SrIII (X-disease) subgroup 16SrIII-F.

The nested PCR products of four samples were purified and directly sequenced. The resultant 16S rDNA sequences showed 100% identity with each other, and were deposited in GenBank (Accession Nos. FJ951626; FJ951627; FJ951628; FJ951629) representing municipalities of Calkini, Tekax, Oxkutzcab and Hopelchen, respectively. BLAST analysis showed the highest similarity (98.6%) with the milkweed yellows phytoplasma 16S rDNA, subgroup 16SrIII-F (AF510724), which was previously reported in the United States in Asclepius syriaca (Griffiths et al., 1994). However there are no records so far on this or other 16SrIII-related phytoplasmas in Mexico. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a 16SrIII phytoplasma in Mexico associated with a disease of a tomato crop.

Figure1+
Figure 1: Yellowing, severe stunting and little leaf symptoms in tomato in Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico
Figure 1: Yellowing, severe stunting and little leaf symptoms in tomato in Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Dr. J. Magaña-Gómez for his critical review of this manuscript.


References

  1. Deng S, Hiruki C, 1991. Amplification of 16S rRNA genes from culturable and nonculturable mollicutes. Journal of Microbiological Methods 14, 53-61.
  2. Griffiths HM, Gundersen DE, Sinclair WA, Lee I-M, Davis RE, 1994. Mycoplasmalike organisms from milkweed, goldenrod, and spirea represent two new 16S rRNA subgroups and three new strains clusters related to peach X-disease MLOs. Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology 16, 255-260.
  3. Gundersen DE, Lee IM, 1996. Ultrasensitive detection of phytoplasmas by nested-PCR assays using two universal primer pairs. Phytopathologia Mediterranea 35, 144–151.

This report was formally published in Plant Pathology

©2009 The Authors