Literature DB >> 30566025

Accumulation of Azelaic Acid in Xylella fastidiosa-Infected Olive Trees: A Mobile Metabolite for Health Screening.

Francesca Nicolì1, Carmine Negro1, Eliana Nutricati1, Marzia Vergine1, Alessio Aprile1, Erika Sabella1, Gina Damiano1, Luigi De Bellis1, Andrea Luvisi1.   

Abstract

Monitoring Xylella fastidiosa is critical for eradicating or at least containing this harmful pathogen. New low-cost and rapid methods for early detection capability are very much needed. Metabolomics may play a key role in diagnosis; in fact, mobile metabolites could avoid errors in sampling due to erratically distributed pathogens. Of the various different mobile signals, we studied dicarboxylic azelaic acid (AzA) which is a key molecule for biotic stress plant response but has not yet been associated with pathogens in olive trees. We found that infected Olea europaea L. plants of cultivars Cellina di Nardò (susceptible to X. fastidiosa) and Leccino (resistant to the pathogen) showed an increase in AzA accumulation in leaf petioles and in sprigs by approximately seven- and sixfold, respectively, compared with plants negative to X. fastidiosa or affected by other pathogens. No statistically significant variation was found between the X. fastidiosa population level and the amount of AzA in either of the plant tissues, suggesting that AzA accumulation was almost independent of the amount of pathogen in the sample. Furthermore, the association of AzA with X. fastidiosa seemed to be reliable for samples judged as potentially false-negative by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (cycle threshold [Ct] > 33), considering both the absolute value of AzA concentration and the values normalized on negative samples, which diverged significantly from control plants. The accumulation of AzA in infected plants was partially supported by the differential expression of two genes (named OeLTP1 and OeLTP2) encoding lipid transport proteins (LTPs), which shared a specific domain with the LTPs involved in AzA activity in systemic acquired resistance in other plant species. The expression level of OeLTP1 and OeLTP2 in petiole samples showed significant upregulation in samples positive to X. fastidiosa of both cultivars, with higher expression levels in positive samples of Cellina di Nardò compared with Leccino, whereas the two transcripts had a low expression level (Ct > 40) in negative samples of the susceptible cultivar. Although the results derived from the quantification of AzA cannot confirm the presence of the erratically distributed X. fastidiosa, which can be definitively assessed by traditional methods, we believe they represent a fast and cheap screening method for large-scale monitoring.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30566025     DOI: 10.1094/PHYTO-07-18-0236-FI

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phytopathology        ISSN: 0031-949X            Impact factor:   4.025


  6 in total

1.  Detection of Lipid Peroxidation-Derived Free Azelaic Acid, a Biotic Stress Marker and Other Dicarboxylic Acids in Tobacco by Reversed-Phase HPLC-MS Under Non-derivatized Conditions.

Authors:  Attila L Ádám; György Kátay; András Künstler; Lóránt Király
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022

2.  Mass Spectrometry-Based Targeted Lipidomics and Supervised Machine Learning Algorithms in Detecting Disease, Cultivar, and Treatment Biomarkers in Xylella fastidiosa subsp. pauca-Infected Olive Trees.

Authors:  Valeria Scala; Manuel Salustri; Stefania Loreti; Nicoletta Pucci; Andrea Cacciotti; Giuseppe Tatulli; Marco Scortichini; Massimo Reverberi
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-04-22       Impact factor: 6.627

3.  Biochemical Changes in Leaves of Vitis vinifera cv. Sangiovese Infected by Bois Noir Phytoplasma.

Authors:  Carmine Negro; Erika Sabella; Francesca Nicolì; Roberto Pierro; Alberto Materazzi; Alessandra Panattoni; Alessio Aprile; Eliana Nutricati; Marzia Vergine; Antonio Miceli; Luigi De Bellis; Andrea Luvisi
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2020-04-07

4.  A non-targeted metabolomics study on Xylella fastidiosa infected olive plants grown under controlled conditions.

Authors:  Asmae Jlilat; Rosa Ragone; Stefania Gualano; Franco Santoro; Vito Gallo; Leonardo Varvaro; Piero Mastrorilli; Maria Saponari; Franco Nigro; Anna Maria D'Onghia
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-01-13       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  The Xylella fastidiosa-Resistant Olive Cultivar "Leccino" Has Stable Endophytic Microbiota during the Olive Quick Decline Syndrome (OQDS).

Authors:  Marzia Vergine; Joana B Meyer; Massimiliano Cardinale; Erika Sabella; Martin Hartmann; Paolo Cherubini; Luigi De Bellis; Andrea Luvisi
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2019-12-31

6.  Molecular Effects of Xylella fastidiosa and Drought Combined Stress in Olive Trees.

Authors:  Mariarosaria De Pascali; Marzia Vergine; Erika Sabella; Alessio Aprile; Eliana Nutricati; Francesca Nicolì; Ilaria Buja; Carmine Negro; Antonio Miceli; Patrizia Rampino; Luigi De Bellis; Andrea Luvisi
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2019-10-23
  6 in total

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