New Disease Reports (2020) 41, 6. [http://dx.doi.org/10.5197/j.2044-0588.2020.041.006]
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First report of Xanthomonas phaseoli pv. phaseoli and Xanthomonas citri pv. fuscans causing common bacterial blight of bean in Belgium

A. Bultreys* and I. Gheysen

*a.bultreys@cra.wallonie.be

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Received: 25 Oct 2019; Published: 17 Jan 2020

Keywords: bacterial plant disease, quarantine, regulated non-quarantine pest

In late August 2019, symptoms consistent with those of common bacterial blight were observed on mature beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) of several varieties in a trial plot in Hesbaye in the centre of Belgium. On leaves, irregular brown spots were surrounded by a yellow halo and progressed to give a burnt appearance (Fig. 1); on pods, water-soaked spots developed into reddish-brown spots (Fig. 2). Symptoms were scattered throughout the plot (approx. 100 m2), and harvesting was abandoned due to pod infection.

Isolations were made from the margins of lesions. Tissues were crushed in 30 µl of sterile deionised water, streaked on King's medium B agar and incubated at 28°C. A yellowish bacterium grew abundantly and single colonies were visible after 48 hr. Analysis of 42 single colonies or strains was made by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (Bruker Maldi Biotyper) with our database containing strains from the EPPO A2 list. The highest identification scores were either Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. phaseoli CFBP 2534PT, as for strain 2986.1a, or X. euvesicatoria CFBP 6864T and X. perforans LMG 28258T, as for strain 3002T1.1 (X. citri pv. fuscans was not in the database). Individual lesions contained only a single type. Pathogenicity was confirmed in vitro using a bean pod assay on pods from three different retail sources (Fig. 3). Inoculated strains were re-isolated from the margin of one water-soaked zone for each pod from each source and correctly identified by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry.

Common bacterial blight of bean is caused by two Xanthomonas species representing four genetic lineages (GL): X. phaseoli pv. phaseoli (GL1; previously X. axonopodis pv. phaseoli) and X. citri pv. fuscans (GL2, GL3, GL fuscans) (Mhedbi-Hajri et al., 2013; Constantin et al., 2016; Chen et al., 2018). The PCR test of Audy et al. (1994) is specific to the four GLs and was positive for 24 Belgian strains isolated from 21 lesions. Parts of the 16S RNA and gyrB (Constantin et al., 2016) genes were sequenced for strains 2986.1a (MN584919; MN594779) and 3002T1.1 (MN584920; MN594780) (GenomeLab DTCS Quick Start Kit, GeXP) and the sequences of reference strains were retrieved from GenBank. The aligned sequences (AlignX) were analysed for phylogeny (MEGA7). GL1 and 2986.1a had identical 16S sequences (Fig. 4); they had a single nucleotide polymorphism with the other GLs, 3002T1.1, X. euvesicatoria and X. perforans, which were identical. The four GLs could be differentiated by the gyrB sequences (Fig. 5); 2986.1a grouped with GL1 and 3002T1.1 with GL2. Thus 2986.1a belongs to X. phaseoli pv. phaseoli and 3002T1.1 to X. citri pv. fuscans GL2.

Common bacterial blight of bean is present in six continents. In the European Union, the pathogens are only regulated on bean seeds (EU Regulations 2016/2031 and 2019/2072); there is no requirement for eradication in the field. In Belgium, an interception on seeds was reported in 2007 (EPPO, 2019) but this is the first report of the disease in a field crop and the pathogens were not eradicated. The case has uncertain origins: detection was late in the season, the plot contained several varieties and was near to a plot of Vicia faba, which is susceptible to the disease (Singh et al., 2012) but whose seeds are not regulated. Late June and July 2019 were particularly hot with only occasional and local stormy rains. High rainfall in mid-August probably explains the spread of disease. Attention should be given to the disease during hot wet summers, particularly if these conditions occur earlier in June and July.

Figure1+
Figure 1: Typical leaf symptoms from which common bacterial blight bacteria (Xanthomonas citri pv. fuscans and X. phaseoli pv. phaseoli) were isolated.
Figure 1: Typical leaf symptoms from which common bacterial blight bacteria (Xanthomonas citri pv. fuscans and X. phaseoli pv. phaseoli) were isolated.
Figure2+
Figure 2: Typical pod symptoms from which common bacterial blight bacteria (Xanthomonas citri pv. fuscans and X. phaseoli pv. phaseoli) were isolated.
Figure 2: Typical pod symptoms from which common bacterial blight bacteria (Xanthomonas citri pv. fuscans and X. phaseoli pv. phaseoli) were isolated.
Figure3+
Figure 3: Water-soaked symptoms on bean pods 3 d after inoculation with strains 2986.1a and 3002T1.1 using a pipette tip and incubation at 28°C under daylight and 100% relative humidity.
Figure 3: Water-soaked symptoms on bean pods 3 d after inoculation with strains 2986.1a and 3002T1.1 using a pipette tip and incubation at 28°C under daylight and 100% relative humidity.
Figure4+
Figure 4: Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree derived from 1452 bp of 16S RNA gene of Xanthomonas strains causing common bacterial blight of bean identified by genetic lineages (GL), and Belgian strains 2986.1a and 3002T1.1 in red-brown. T, type strain; PT, pathotype strain. GenBank accession numbers of sequences follow strain names. X. oryzae PXO99A and X. vasicola NCPPB 1060 used as outgroups. Bootstrap values are for 1000 replicates. Scale bar represents number of nucleotide substitutions per site.
Figure 4: Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree derived from 1452 bp of 16S RNA gene of Xanthomonas strains causing common bacterial blight of bean identified by genetic lineages (GL), and Belgian strains 2986.1a and 3002T1.1 in red-brown. T, type strain; PT, pathotype strain. GenBank accession numbers of sequences follow strain names. X. oryzae PXO99A and X. vasicola NCPPB 1060 used as outgroups. Bootstrap values are for 1000 replicates. Scale bar represents number of nucleotide substitutions per site.
Figure5+
Figure 5: Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree derived from 530 bp of gyrB gene of Xanthomonas strains. X. citri pv. fuscans and X. phaseoli pv. phaseoli strains, identified by genetic lineages (GL) are shown and Belgian strains 2986.1a and 3002T1.1 are in red-brown. T, type strain; PT, pathotype strain. GenBank accession numbers of sequences follow strain names. X. oryzae PXO99A and X. vasicola NCPPB 1060 used as outgroups. Bootstrap values are for 1000 replicates. Scale bar represents number of nucleotide substitutions per site.
Figure 5: Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree derived from 530 bp of gyrB gene of Xanthomonas strains. X. citri pv. fuscans and X. phaseoli pv. phaseoli strains, identified by genetic lineages (GL) are shown and Belgian strains 2986.1a and 3002T1.1 are in red-brown. T, type strain; PT, pathotype strain. GenBank accession numbers of sequences follow strain names. X. oryzae PXO99A and X. vasicola NCPPB 1060 used as outgroups. Bootstrap values are for 1000 replicates. Scale bar represents number of nucleotide substitutions per site.

References

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To cite this report: Bultreys A, Gheysen I, 2020. First report of Xanthomonas phaseoli pv. phaseoli and Xanthomonas citri pv. fuscans causing common bacterial blight of bean in Belgium. New Disease Reports 41, 6. [http://dx.doi.org/10.5197/j.2044-0588.2020.041.006]

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