April
2000
, Volume
84
, Number
4
Pages
429
-
436
Authors
H. G.
Montano
,
Programa de Biotecnologia Vegetal/Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Cidade Universitária, Ilha do Fundão, Rio de Janeiro, and UFRRJ/IB, Departamento de Entomologia e Fitopatologia, Brazil, and USDA-ARS, Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory, Beltsville, MD
;
R. E.
Davis
and
E. L.
Dally
,
USDA-ARS, Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory, Beltsville, MD 20705
;
J. P.
Pimentel
and
P. S. T.
Brioso
,
UFRRJ/IB, Departamentode Entomologia e Fitopatologia, C.P. 74585, CEP 23851-970, Seropédica, RJ, Brazil
Affiliations
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RelatedArticle
Accepted for publication 10 December 1999.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Chayote (Sechium edule) (Cucurbitaceae), also known as vegetable pear, mirliton, or mango squash, is a commercially important vegetable crop in Brazil, where it is affected by chayote witches'-broom disease. Affected plants exhibit witches'-broom growths and other symptoms characteristic of plant diseases caused by phytoplasmas. Since previous electron microscopic studies revealed the association of a phytoplasma with chayote witches'-broom, the present work was aimed at detecting and classifying the phytoplasma that may be the causal agent of the disease. Strains of a phytoplasma belonging to group 16SrIII (X-disease phytoplasma group) were discovered in chayote affected by witches'-broom disease and in diseased plants of Momordica charantia that were growing as weeds in fields of chayote in Brazil. On the basis of results from restriction fragment length polymorphism and nucleotide sequence analyses of 16S rDNA, the phytoplasma was classified in a new subgroup, designated subgroup III-J. This classification was supported by a phylogenetic tree constructed by the Neighbor-Joining method.
JnArticleKeywords
Additional keywords:
bitter gourd,
RFLP,
16S rRNA
Page Content
ArticleCopyright
The American Phytopathological Society, 2000