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Pathogenic Isolates of Rhodococcus fascians from New Hosts in
the United States. M. L. Putnam and M. Miller, Department of Botany and
Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis 97331. Plant Dis. 90:526,
2006; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0526C. Accepted for publication 9
January 2006.

Rhodococcus fascians is important to the nursery industry due to its
broad host range (68 genera) (2) and potential for horizontal gene transfer of
plasmid-borne virulence genes. Since 2001, many herbaceous ornamental plants
with symptoms of leafy galls or basal or axillary shoot proliferation
suggestive of infection by R. fascians have been submitted to the Oregon
State University Plant Clinic for diagnosis. R. fascians was isolated
from symptomatic plants by placing affected tissues into saline or liquid D2
medium (1) for 30 to 120 min and then dilution plating onto D2 agar. Orange
colonies were purified by dilution streaking and identified as R. fascians
by substrate utilization (Biolog, Hayward, CA) and fatty acid analysis (L.
Barnes, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX). Pathogenicity was
confirmed by inoculation of 10 newly germinated Pisum sativum ‘Laxton
Progress’ and ‘Sugar Pod’ seedlings with bacteria from 2-day-old cultures (10(^7)
CFU/ml) or water (controls). Our isolates produced shoot proliferations typical
of R. fascians infection of peas, confirming pathogenicity.
Control plants remained healthy. Pathogenic R. fascians isolates were
associated with and isolated from eight species not previously reported as
hosts: Acanthus mollis, Campanula sarastro, Heliopsis
helianthoides ‘Loraine Sunshine’, Nemesia × ‘Natalie’, Hosta ×
‘Blue Umbrella’, Verbascum ‘Sierra Sunset’, Veronica spicata
‘Minuet’ and Viola × ‘Purple Showers’.
References: (1) N. W. Schaad et al. Laboratory Guide to Plant Pathogenic
Bacteria. The American Phytopathological Society, 2001. (2) D. Vereecke et al.
Mol. Plant-Microbe Interact. 6:53, 2003.

Leafy gall at the base of Verbascum from which
pathogenic Rhodococcus fascians was isolated.
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