October
2000
, Volume
84
, Number
10
Pages
1,061
-
1,066
Authors
Juozas B.
Staniulis
,
Plant Virus Laboratory, Institute of Botany, Vilnius, Lithuania
;
Robert E.
Davis
,
United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS) Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory, Beltsville, MD 20705
;
Rasa
Jomantiene
,
Plant Virus Laboratory, Institute of Botany, Vilnius, Lithuania and USDA-ARS Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory
;
Audrone
Kalvelyte
,
Laboratory of Gene Regulation, Institute of Biochemistry, Vilnius, Lithuania
; and
Ellen L.
Dally
,
USDA-ARS Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory
Affiliations
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RelatedArticle
Accepted for publication 20 June 2000
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Naturally diseased plants of clover (Trifolium spp.) exhibiting symptoms of clover phyllody (virescence and phyllody of flowers) or of clover dwarf (abnormally small leaves, shortened internodes, proliferation of shoots, and dwarf growth habit) were observed in fields in Lithuania. Phytoplasma group-specific polymerase chain reactions (PCRs) and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of 16S rDNA revealed that the plants were infected by two mutually distinct phytoplasmas. Clover phyllody-diseased plants were infected by a subgroup 16SrI-C (subgroup I-C) phytoplasma (CPh-L) related to clover phyllody (CPh-C) phytoplasma in Canada. Clover dwarf-diseased plants were infected by both CPh-L and a phytoplasma (CYE-L) related to clover yellow edge (CYE-C) phytoplasma (subgroup 16SrIII-B = III-B) in Canada. A 1.8-kbp fragment of rRNA operon from CYE-L was amplified, cloned, and sequenced, and putative restriction sites mapped. This sequence shared high similarity (99.7%) with that of CYE-C and exhibited no differences from CYE-C in RFLP patterns of 16S rDNA; therefore, we tentatively classified CYE-L in subgroup 16SrIII-B (type strain, CYE = CYE-C phytoplasma) of the X-disease phytoplasma group. These findings extend the known geographical ranges of subgroup I-C and subgroup III-B taxa to the region of northern Europe including Lithuania and suggest a role of the subgroup III-B phytoplasma in clover dwarf disease.
JnArticleKeywords
Additional keywords:
rRNA,
Trifolium hybridum,
T. pratense.
T. repens.
Page Content
ArticleCopyright
The American Phytopathological Society, 2000