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The American Phytopathological Society
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A New Phytoplasma Infecting Lettuce in Iran. M. Salehi, K. Izadpanah, and
N. Nejat, Department of Plant Protection, College of Agriculture, Shiraz
University, Iran. Plant Dis. 90:247, 2006; published on-line as DOI:
10.1094/PD-90-0247C. Accepted for publication 22 November 2005.
Lettuce phyllody (LP) is an economically important disease of romaine lettuce
(Lactuca sativa) in vegetative crop and seed crop fields in the Fars
Province of Iran. Wild lettuce phyllody (WLP) occurs also in epidemic
proportions in wild lettuce (L. serriola) during the fall in
Iranian central and southern provinces, especially in Fars. Among various
leafhopper species tested, Neoaliturus fenestratus successfully
transmitted agents of LP and WLP to lettuce, wild lettuce, periwinkle, and
sowthistle directly after field collection or after 5 to 7 days of feeding on
diseased source plants. With primer pair P1/P7 in polymerase chain reaction
(PCR), target DNA fragments (1.8 kbp) were amplified from total nucleic acid
samples extracted from diseased lettuce and wild lettuce plants, but not from
healthy counterparts. On the basis of disease symptoms, leafhopper transmission,
and positive reaction in phytoplasma-specific PCR, Iranian lettuce and wild
lettuce phyllodies agents have phytoplasmal etiology. Phylogenetic and putative
restriction site analysis of 16S/23S rDNA spacer region (SR) indicated that LP
and WLP phytoplasmas are members of pigeon pea witches’-broom (16SrIX) group and
are closely related. Reciprocal transmission of LP phytoplasma to wild lettuce
and WLP phytoplasma to lettuce by the same leafhopper species and induction of
similar symptoms in common hosts are other evidences that agents of LP and WLP
may be related or identical phytoplasmas. This is the first report of lettuce as
a new host in pigeon pea witches’-broom group and N. fenestratus as a
vector of a pigeon pea witches’-broom group phytoplasma. In other countries,
phytoplasmas of aster yellows group (16SrI) are commonly associated with
phytoplasmal lettuce diseases (2) and Macrosteles quadrilineatus
leafhopper is reported as the vector (1). Relatedness of WLP phytoplasma to
16SrIX group was previously reported (3). On the basis of the results of this
study, wild lettuce and sowthistle are two reservoirs of LP phytoplasma.
References: (1) D. Errampalli et al. Phytopathology 76:1084, 1986. (2)
I.-M. Lee et al. Ann. Rev. Microbiol. 54:221, 2000. (3) E. Verdin et al. Int. J.
Syst. Bacteriol. Evol. Microbiol. 53:833, 2003.
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