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Ratios of Cells With and Without Virulence Genes in Rhodococcus fascians Populations Correlate with Degrees of Symptom Development

May 2009 , Volume 93 , Number  5
Pages  499 - 506

Ekaterina V. Nikolaeva, Sook-Young Park, and Seogchan Kang, Department of Plant Pathology, Penn State University, University Park, PA 16802; and Tracey N. Olson and Seong H. Kim, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, Harrisburg 17110



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Accepted for publication 17 January 2009.
ABSTRACT

Rhodococcus fascians, a gram-positive phytopathogenic bacterium, causes fasciation and leafy galls on a wide range of monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants for which it requires the plasmid-borne fas operon. Strains isolated from symptomatic plants over a 20-year-period exhibited a high degree of variability when their virulence was assessed on garden pea seedlings. Polymerase chain reaction amplification of the fas-1 and fasR virulence genes from randomly chosen single colonies showed that many strains consisted of two subpopulations, of which one had lost these genes. Inoculation of pea seedlings with mixtures of fas-1-positive and -negative cells that originated from the same strain demonstrated a strong correlation (Pearson's r ≥ 0.9205) between the proportion of cells in the inoculum carrying the fas-1 gene and the severity of disease symptoms. The minimal concentration of fas-1-positive cells required for the development of small lateral shoots on pea seedlings was 2.5 × 104 CFU/ml (P ≤ 0.008), while the overall suppression of main stem growth was observed at 2.5 × 105 CFU/ml (P ≤ 0.019). These observations underline that care should be taken when the virulence of clinical R. fascians strains is evaluated.



© 2009 The American Phytopathological Society