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Tumorigenic Agrobacterium sp. Isolated from Weeping Fig in Spain.
R. Penyalver and J. J. Sánchez, Departamento de Protección Vegetal y
Biotecnología, Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA),
Apartado oficial, 46113 Moncada, Valencia, Spain; A. Petit, Institut des
Sciences Végétales, Centre National de Recherche Scientifique, 91198
Gif-sur-Yvette, France; and C. I. Salcedo and M. M. López, Departamento de
Protección Vegetal y Biotecnología, Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones
Agrarias (IVIA), Apartado oficial, 46113 Moncada, Valencia, Spain. Plant Dis.
88:428, 2004; published on-line as D-2004-0209-01N, 2004. Accepted for
publication 14 January 2004.
Agrobacterium-like colonies were recovered onto Roy-Sasser’s medium
from a young tumor (4 cm in diameter) on the stem of weeping fig (Ficus
benjamina L.), 10 cm from the crown. The galled plant was collected in 1999
from a garden center in Valencia, Spain. After colony purification and tomato
and weeping fig plant inoculations, one nonpathogenic and five Agrobacterium
isolates that were tumorigenic in both plant species were characterized. On the
basis of biovar classification tests, the nonpathogenic isolate was identified
as belonging to biovar 1 of Agrobacterium (now called A. tumefaciens),
whereas the tumorigenic isolates could not be assigned to any of the known Agrobacterium
biovars. The isolates were positive for oxidase, growth in 2% NaCl, production
of alkali from l-tartaric acid, and production of acid from mannitol-CaCO(3) and
negative for 3-ketolactose production, growth and pigmentation in ferric
ammonium citrate, growth at 35°C, citrate utilization, acid production from
sucrose and melezitose, and alkali production from malonic acid. Nopaline was
the unique opine found in galls induced in weeping fig plants inoculated with
the pathogenic isolates. Moreover, all isolates utilize the opine nopaline, but
not octopine, manopine, agropine, chrysopine, cucumopine, or mikimopine. They
were susceptible to agrocin 84 produced by strain K84. Heat-treated bacterial
suspensions of these isolates yielded the expected amplification product using
polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with the FGPtmr530/FGPtmr701(prime)
primers pair from the tmr gene (3). Aerial gall disease was first
reported on F. benjamina in Florida (1), and the isolated agrobacteria
belongs to a new species named A. larrymoorei (2). Later, tumorigenic
agrobacteria from weeping fig galls were isolated in Italy and the Netherlands
(4). Our data suggest that the tumorigenic strains isolated in Spain differ
greatly from those first described in the United States (1) on the basis of
alkali production from l-tartaric acid, chrysopine detection on tumors,
susceptibility to agrocin 84, and tmr amplification, but they might be
similar to some of the Italian isolates (4). To our knowledge, this is the first
report of isolation of tumorigenic Agrobacterium sp. from F. benjamina
L. in Spain.
References: (1) H. Bouzar et al. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 61:65, 1995.
(2) H. Bouzar and J. B. Jones. Int. J. Syst. Evol. Microbiol. 51:1023. 2001. (3)
X. Nesme et al. Pages 47-50 in: Endocytobiology IV. P. Nardon et al. eds. INRA,
France, 1989. (4) A. Zoina et al. Plant Pathol. 50:620, 2001.
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