| Literature DB >> 20233080 |
Jose L Ramirez1, Paulo T Lacava, Thomas A Miller.
Abstract
Homalodisca vitripennis (Germar) (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae), the glassy-winged sharpshooter, is one of the most important vectors of the bacterium, Xylella fastidiosa subsp. piercei (Xanthomonadales: Xanthomonadaceae) that causes Pierce's Disease in grapevines in California. In the present study we report a new method for studying pathogen transmission or probing behavior of H. vitripennis. When confined, H. vitripennis attempt to probe the surface of sterile containers 48 hours post-acquisition of X. f. piercei. The saliva deposited during attempted feeding probes was found to contain X. f. piercei. We observed no correlation between X. f. piercei titers in the foregut of H. vitripennis that fed on Xylella-infected grapevines and the presence of this bacterium in the deposited saliva. The infection rate after a 48 h post-acquisition feeding on healthy citrus and grapevines was observed to be 77% for H. vitripennis that fed on grapevines and 81% for H. vitripennis that fed on citrus, with no difference in the number of positive probing sites from H. vitripennis that fed on either grapevine or citrus. This method is amenable for individual assessment of X. f. piercei-infecuvity, with samples less likely to be affected by tissue contamination that is usually present in whole body extracts.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 20233080 PMCID: PMC3061605 DOI: 10.1673/031.008.3401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Insect Sci ISSN: 1536-2442 Impact factor: 1.857
Figure 1. Probing session sequence and deposition of saliva. A. Glassy-winged sharpshooter in microcentrifuge tube, B. Labial position on microcentrifuge tube, C. Ventral view of H. vitripennis head, D. Initiation of probing session, E. and F. probing and deposition of sheath saliva.
Representative data set obtained from H. vitripennis probing sessions. Field-collected H. vitripennis were confined to X. fastidiosa-infected grapevines for an acquisition access period of 48 h., transferred to either grapevines or citrus for 48 hours and then starved for 1 hour prior to their transfer into a sterile 1.5 µl microcentrifuge tube. Table details whether a sharpshooter was X. f. piercei-infected (+/-), type of post-acquisition plant host (grapevines or citrus), probing session (whether it was +/- or none = no successful probing session) and X. f. piercei titers estimated from each individual sharpshooter. Xylella fastidiosa detection and titer quantification was conducted by real-time PCR.
Xylella fastidiosa frequency of detection (%) in saliva samples from H. vitripennis that fed on grapevines or citrus. Table shows frequency of detection calculated independent of titer group and when the data set was partitioned in two groups containing below or above 5000 copies/µl of sharpshooter head.
Xylella fastidiosa frequency of detection (%) in saliva samples from H. vitripennis that had X. f. piercei cells below and above 5000 cells in their foregut. Analysis is independent of host plant.
Figure 2. Probe frequency comparison between H. vitripennis that had grapevines or citrus as hosts. This graph represents probe sessions for all sharpshooters including those that tested negative for X. f. piercei.