| Literature DB >> 28491068 |
Jian Liu1,2,3, David Gopurenko3,4, Murray J Fletcher3, Anne C Johnson3, Geoff M Gurr1,2,3.
Abstract
Phytoplasmas are insect-vectored bacteria that cause disease in a wide range of plant species. The increasing availability of molecular DNA analyses, expertise and additional methods in recent years has led to a proliferation of discoveries of phytoplasma-plant host associations and in the numbers of taxonomic groupings for phytoplasmas. The widespread use of common names based on the diseases with which they are associated, as well as separate phenetic and taxonomic systems for classifying phytoplasmas based on variation at the 16S rRNA-encoding gene, complicates interpretation of the literature. We explore this issue and related trends through a focus on Australian pathosystems, providing the first comprehensive compilation of information for this continent, covering the phytoplasmas, host plants, vectors and diseases. Of the 33 16Sr groups reported internationally, only groups I, II, III, X, XI and XII have been recorded in Australia and this highlights the need for ongoing biosecurity measures to prevent the introduction of additional pathogen groups. Many of the phytoplasmas reported in Australia have not been sufficiently well studied to assign them to 16Sr groups so it is likely that unrecognized groups and sub-groups are present. Wide host plant ranges are apparent among well studied phytoplasmas, with multiple crop and non-crop species infected by some. Disease management is further complicated by the fact that putative vectors have been identified for few phytoplasmas, especially in Australia. Despite rapid progress in recent years using molecular approaches, phytoplasmas remain the least well studied group of plant pathogens, making them a "crouching tiger" disease threat.Entities:
Keywords: 16S rRNA; biodiversity; biosecurity; host range; seed transmission; taxonomy; vector; “Candidatus Phytoplasma”
Year: 2017 PMID: 28491068 PMCID: PMC5405143 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.00599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Taxonomic and biological information on phytoplasmas in Australia (empty cells denote the absence of available information).
| II | australasiae | Australian lucerne yellows | South Australia, New South Wales, Northern Territory | Padovan and Gibb, | ||
| II | Bonamia pannosa little leaf | Northern Territory | Schneider et al., | |||
| II | Cactus witches' broom | Northern Territory | Padovan and Gibb, | |||
| II | Cocky apple witches' broom | Queensland | Davis et al., | |||
| II | Waltheria little leaf | Northern Territory | Schneider et al., | |||
| II | australasiae | Tomato big bud | Northern Territory, New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, Victoria | Gibb et al., | ||
| II | aurantifolia | Chickpea little leaf | Western Australia | Saqib et al., | ||
| II | australasiae | Papaya yellow crinkle | Queensland | Gibb et al., | ||
| II | australasiae | Papaya mosaic | Queensland | Gibb et al., | ||
| II | Tree medic witches' broom | South Australia | Yang et al., | |||
| II | Pigeonpea phyllody | South Australia | Yang et al., | |||
| II | Pigeon pea little leaf | Northern Territory, Queensland, Torres Strait | Schneider et al., | |||
| II-D | australasiae | Pale purple coneflower witches' broom | Tasmania | Pearce et al., | ||
| II-D | australasiae | Sweet potato little leaf | Torres Strait, Northern Territory, Western Australia, New South Wales | Gibb et al., | ||
| XI-B | Cynodon white leaf | Northern Territory, Western Australia | Schneider et al., | |||
| XI-B | Sorghum grassy shoot | Western Australia, Northern Territory | Tran-Nguyen et al., | |||
| XII | Australian lucerne yellows | New South Wales | Getachew et al., | |||
| XII | Papaya dieback | Queensland | Gibb et al., | |||
| XII-B | australiense | Pumpkin yellow leaf curl | Queensland, Western Australia, Northern Territory | Streten et al., | ||
| XII-B | australiense | Cenchrus bunchy shoot | Western Australia | Tran-Nguyen et al., | ||
| XII-B | australiense | Strawberry green petal disease | Queensland | Padovan et al., | ||
| XII-B | australiense | Strawberry lethal yellows | Queensland | Padovan et al., | ||
| XII-B | australiense | Australian grapevine yellows | South Australia, Queensland | Davis et al., | ||
| XXIII | Buckland Valley grapevine yellows | Victoria | Constable et al., | |||
| XXV | Weeping tea tree witches' broom | Queensland | Davis et al., | |||
| XXXIII | Allocasuarina yellows | South Australia | Gibb et al., | |||
| Poinsettia branching | Schneider et al., | |||||
| Galactia little leaf | Northern Territory | Schneider et al., | ||||
| Sorghum bunchy shoot | Tran-Nguyen et al., | |||||
| Stylosanthes little leaf | Northern Territory, Queensland, New South Wales | Schneider et al., | ||||
| Sugarcane white leaf | Western Australia, Queensland | Tran-Nguyen et al., | ||||
| Vigna little leaf | Northern Australia | Schneider et al., | ||||
| Mundulla yellows disease | South Australia | Hanold et al., | ||||
| Paulownia witches' broom | Western Australia | Bayliss et al., |
Denotes reference for vector data.
Location data are from the listed references but not every plant species was diseased in every location.
A new taxon, Ca. Phytoplasma australasia was proposed (White et al., .
Davis and Sinclair (.
Constable et al. (.
Zhao and Davis (.
This phytoplasma has not been found in economically important field crops.
Tentative data only for a phytoplasma etiology.
RFLP patterns showed high similarity to “Candidatus Phytoplasma australiense.”