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The American Phytopathological Society
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First Report of a Defect of Processing Potatoes in Texas and Nebraska
Associated with a New Phytoplasma. G. A. Secor, Department of Plant
Pathology, North Dakota State University, Fargo 58105; I.-M. Lee and K. D.
Bottner, Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory, USDA, ARS, Beltsville, MD 20705;
and V. Rivera-Varas and N. C. Gudmestad, Department of Plant Pathology, North
Dakota State University, Fargo 58105. Plant Dis. 90:377, 2006; published on-line
as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0377B. Accepted for publication 11 December 2005.
An outbreak of a new potato disease occurred in Texas and Nebraska causing a
serious defect in potato chips produced from commercial processing potatoes.
The defect consists of patchy brown discoloration of chips and can be a cause
for rejection of contracted potatoes by the processor. Infected potato plants
exhibit symptoms of the purple top wilt syndrome similar to those of the purple
top disease in processing potatoes caused by clover proliferation phytoplasma
recently found in Washington and Oregon (3). Foliar symptoms include stunting,
chlorosis, slight purple coloration of new growth, swollen nodes, proliferated
axillary buds, and aerial tubers. Tuber symptoms include mild vascular
discoloration and brown flecking of medullary rays. Seed potatoes from affected
plants produce hair sprouts. Total nucleic acid was extracted from leaf and
stolon tissue of symptomatic plants in the field and from tuber samples
exhibiting the defect from commercial storages. Nested polymerase chain
reactions (PCR) were performed using phytoplasma-universal 16SrDNA-based primers
(P1/P7 and R16F2n/R16R2) (2) to detect the presence of phytoplasmas in these
samples. A negative control, devoid of DNA templates in the reaction mix, was
included in all PCR assays. In 2004, 13 foliar samples tested positive for
phytoplasmas using PCR. None of the apparently symptomless plants or tubers
tested positive. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of the
PCR-amplified 16S rDNA using enzymes AluI, MseI, HhaI,
BfaI, and Tsp509I indicated that four samples are associated with a
phytoplasma belonging to subgroup A (16SrI-A) of the “Candidatus
Phytoplasma asteris” (aster yellows phytoplasma) group (16SrI), and nine plant
samples were associated with a new phytoplasma related to, but distinct from,
the stolbur phytoplasma group (16SrXII). Nucleotide sequence analysis of cloned
16S rDNAs (GenBank Accession Nos. DQ174114-DQ174123) confirmed the results on
the basis of RFLP analyses. Sequences of cloned 16S rDNAs were analyzed with
previously described phytoplasma strains available in GenBank using DNAStar’s
(Madison, WI) Lasergene software MegAlign program. The new phytoplasma is only
distantly related to the stolbur phytoplasma, sharing 96.6% sequence homology.
In 2005, 14 defective tuber samples from storage and 16 symptomatic plants from
the field tested positive for the new phytoplasma. In Texas and Nebraska, it
appears that at least two distinct phytoplasmas seem to be involved in the
disease complex contributing to the defects of processed products produced from
infected potatoes. Previous reports have suggested a similar defect of chipping
potatoes, but the phytoplasma associated with the disease was not identified
(1). To our knowledge, this the first report of this new phytoplasma
associated with disease and defects of potato and the first report of this
phytoplasma in the United States.
References: (1) E. E. Bantarri et al. Trans. ASAE 33:221, 1990. (2)
I.-M. Lee et al. Int. J. Sys. Bacteriol. 48:1153, 1998. (3) I.-M.
Lee et al. Plant Dis. 88:429, 2004.
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