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1.
Two procedures were developed to isolate plant spiroplasmas directly onto DG-2 agar plates or in DG-2 broth without subcultures or dilutions. The frequency of successful spiroplasma isolations was increased by centrifuging samples, after passing through a 0.45-μm filter, at 25,000 × g for 1 h. Spiroplasmas were obtained from peach, cherry, Madagascar periwinkle, and celery with typical symptoms of the Green Valley strain of X disease (GVX), from peach with typical symptoms of the peach yellow leaf roll strain of X disease (PYLR), from Madagascar periwinkle with typical symptoms of aster yellows (AY), from celery with atypical symptoms of GVX (mild GVX), from plantago with atypical symptoms of aster yellows (mild AY), and from stubborn-diseased citrus. Isolations were consistent (>90%) from plants with mild GVX, mild AY, and citrus stubborn, while isolations were inconsistent (0–9%) from plants with typical symptoms of GVX, PYLR, and AY. The role of the isolated spiroplasmas in plant disease was not determined in this study. All spiroplasma isolates were serologically indistinguishable fromSpiroplasma citri. Spiroplasmas were seen in electron micrographs of 8 out of 9 examined plants from which spiroplasmas were isolated. However, electron micrographs of all 13 examined plants from which no spiroplasmas were isolated contained mycoplasma-like organisms (MLOs) but no, spiroplasmas. These results indicate that there is a correlation between helical MLOs in vivo and successful isolation of spiroplasmas, and that plants may be infected with bothS. citri and nonhelical mycoplasmas.  相似文献   

2.
The isolation of spiroplasma strains from the cactusOpuntia tuna monstrosa and from aster yellows-diseased lettuce is described. DNA from these strains (ATCC 29594 and ATCC 29747) is compared with DNA fromSpiroplasma citri, and from the corn stunt and suckling mouse cataract spiroplasmas. The cactus and the lettuce isolates are found to be identical withS. citri by this method.  相似文献   

3.
The deformation test is a simple and highly sensitive technique capable of demonstrating significant antigenic differences among helical, wall-less prokaryotes (spiroplasmas). Specific identified. Quantitative relationships among various antisera are determined by examining, under dark-field microscopy, samples containing serum dilutions and a measured number of organisms which is held constant in each test. Antisera dilutions of 1:2,000 to 1;16,000 deformed spiroplasmas in homologous tests involvingSpiroplasma citri and the corn stunt and suckling mouse cataract spiroplasmas. With the exception of some heterologous cross-reactions in the deformation test betweenS. citri and corn stunt spiroplasmas, antisera and preimmunization sera failed to deform heterologous spiroplasmas at dilutions higher than 1:16.  相似文献   

4.
Spiroplasma citri was found to carry an 8.0 kb plasmid that differed from previously describedS. citri plasmids in its restriction map. It was also clonable in pBR322. The plasmid, named pRA1, was found in large quantities as free plasmid inS. citri (R8A2, Maroc) subclones of low passage level. In subclones of higher passage levels, free plasmid was replaced by plasmid sequences integrated into the spiroplasma chromosome. Significant quantities of integrated plasmid sequences were also observed in the corn stunt spiroplasma,S. kunkelii, while small quantities of free and/or integrated plasmid DNA could be detected in some spiroplasmas serologically and genotypically remote fromS. citri. Integrated plasmid sequences were cloned into theEscherichia coli plasmid pUC13. Hybridization tests and restriction maps of these clones indicated that the integrated plasmid sequences consisted of fragments, rather than entire plasmid DNA, inserted into specific sites in the spiroplasma chromosome. Although the biological role of the pRA1 plasmid remains unclear, theS. citri subclones containing large quantities of free plasmid exhibited slower growth rates and a tendency to lyse.  相似文献   

5.
Differences betweenSpiroplasma citri isolates were detected by one-dimensional electrophoresis of proteins on gradient polyacrylamide slab gels. Two-dimensional protein maps (electrofocusing followed by electrophoresis) showed a highly characteristic pattern for allS. citri isolates examined. Coanalysis of mixed protein samples from pairs ofS. citri strains revealed more than 150 comigrating proteins common to allS. citri isolates, but also a number of noncomigrating proteins. Some noncomigrating proteins were present in one isolate but not in another, while other proteins whose migrational properties were only slightly different from one isolate to the other (homologous proteins), were present in more than one isolate.S. citri isolates had many common and only a few homologous proteins. Comparisons ofS. citri with the corn stunt spiroplasma revealed few common proteins and a large number of homologous proteins. When comparingS. citri and the suckling mouse cataract spiroplasma, few common and homologous proteins were apparent. However, several of these common proteins were also shared by the corn stunt spiroplasma, suggesting that they may well represent genus-specific proteins. The data also offer additional evidence that the suckling mouse cataract spiroplasma differs significantly fromS. citri and corn stunt spiroplasmas and probably deserves a separate species designation.  相似文献   

6.
Seven spiroplasmas recovered from insects and flower surfaces in widely separated geographical areas were analyzed serologically by metabolism inhibition, enzyme-linked immunosorbent, and growth inhibition tests. Although the seven organisms were serologically interrelated, they were not identical. The seven spiroplasmas in this cluster did not show serological cross-reactions to other established serogroups of spiroplasmas, including theSpiroplasma citri complex. Results of the serological analyses correlate well with genome size differences recently documented for this group of spiroplasmas and support a recently proposed classificatin scheme.  相似文献   

7.
Spiroplasma kunkelii and Spiroplasma citri, both helical-shaped cell wall-less bacteria, are the causative agents of corn stunt disease and citrus stubborn disease, respectively. Plants exhibiting natural resistance to these phytopathogenic spiroplasmas are currently lacking. Engineering artificial plant resistance using antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) has been conceived as a new approach to control the agronomically important spiroplasmal diseases. In preparation for such task, the present study focused on screening of AMPs that have potentials to curb the growth of S. kunkelii and S. citri. Four AMPs, including Novispirin T7, Caerin 1.1, Tricholongin and Dhvar4, were selected for in vitro growth inhibition test. A liquid assay method was developed for quick qualitative and quantitative evaluations of the AMPs. Our results demonstrated that Novispirin T7 and Caerin 1.1 were able to inhibit the growth of both phytopathogenic spiroplasmas with the efficacy comparable to that of tetracycline. Cell deformations were observed in spiroplasma cultures treated with these two peptides, indicating interactions of the AMPs with the spiroplasma cell membranes. The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of the AMPs against S. kunkelii and S. citri were determined.  相似文献   

8.
Multiplication of a virus resembling spiroplasma-virus citri type 3 was observed in Spiroplasma citri cells within an infected Madagascar periwinkle plant showing unusually mild symptoms. Sap filtrates from this plant contained virus particles which gave rise to plaques on lawns of the lethal SP-A strain of S. citri. Transmission of spiroplasmas containing virus to plants already infected with strain SP-A resulted in suppression of symptoms and a reduction in the number of viable spiroplasmas.  相似文献   

9.
Preparations of spiralin from membranes ofSpiroplasma citri, strain C189, purified by sequential solubilization with detergents followed by agarose-suspension electrophoresis induced rabbit antibodies that were largely specific forSpiroplasma citri Group I-1 spiroplasmas, as demonstrated by metabolic inhibition (MI), growth inhibition (GI), and deformation (DF) tests. By contrast, antibodies againstS. citri whole-membrane protein preparations reacted broadly with representative type cultures of seven subgroups of theS. citri complex. Neither antimembrane nor antispiralin sera reacted withS. floricola, S. mirum, or Group IV, (VI), (VII), or (VIII) spiroplasmas. Minor cross-reactions in MI and DF tests between antispiralin serum and Subgroup I-2 and I-3 antigens may have represented shared epitopes in a set of homologous membrane proteins of the three spiroplasmas, or antibodies against highly antigenic traces of other common membrane proteins in the purified spiralin preparations. The unique antigenic properties of spiralin, the most abundant protein in theS. citri membrane, explain in part the unique profiles shown by this spiroplasma species in comparative taxonomic serological tests.  相似文献   

10.
Following inoculation of designated leaves of turnip plants withSpiroplasma citri byCirculifer tenellus, spiroplasmas were cultured first from roots (four days) and then from youngest leaves (eight days), but almost never from oldest leaves. In experiments using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to monitor changes in titer in turnip leaves during the course of plant infection,S. citri was detected seven days after inoculation and reached peak titers of 1010–1011 colony-forming units/g 12–20 days after inoculation, declining thereafter. Spiroplasmas were detected 5–9 days before symptoms appeared.  相似文献   

11.
E. C. K. Igwegbe 《Protoplasma》1979,100(3-4):215-229
Summary Electron microscope examination of ultrathin sections of leaf veins of stubborn—affected citrus seedlings revealed three morphotypes ofSpiroplasma citri free in the cytoplasm of mature sieve elements. In addition to these, inclusions believed to beSpiroplasma citri, some in various stages of degeneration, were occasionally found inside spherical, ovoid, or angular membraneous structures (= packets) which occurred in sieve elements devoid of any recognizable organelles. These packets which varied in size from 1.0 to 1.8 m wide an 1.9 to 3.5 m long were bounded by unit membrane ca. 9 to 10 nm thick. Spiroplasmas and packets were apparently absent in sieve elements of leaf veins of healthy citrus seedlings. Three types of packets were recognized based on the size of spiroplasmas contained: type I packets contained large, intermediate, and small spiroplasmas, but small forms predominated; type II packets contained a mixture of large and intermediate forms, while type III packets contained essentially tightly—packed large forms. Results of the study suggested that the spiroplasma-containing packets are either definite reproductive structures peculiar toSpiroplasma citri or are sieve-tube cells in various stages of plasmolysis. Evidence is presented indicating that within a given packet small spiroplasmas were produced from large spiroplasmas by some process of cell constriction followed by fission, or by budding. Since these spiroplasma—containing packets were infrequently observed in infected tissues we suggest that cell division by budding, of by constriction followed by fission into unequal daughter cells may be the principal mode of reproduction inSpiroplasma citri.  相似文献   

12.
Spiroplasma citri, a helical, wall-less prokaryote, is an insect-borne phytopathogen. Though proteins having domains on the surface ofS. citri cells may be important in pathogenicity or transmissibility, only one surface protein, spiralin (29 KDa), has previously been identified. Intact cells of strain BR3 were treated with chymotrypsin, proteinase K, or trypsin, and the surviving proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Seven proteins, in addition to spiralin, were degraded, indicative of surface exposure of those polypeptides. Surface immunoprecipitation (SIP) was used to test accessibility of the proteins to anti-S. citri membrane serum, another indication of surface exposure. With unlabeled cells, five such proteins were identified. Four of these have sizes that correspond to those seen with protease treatments. When125I surfacelabeled spiroplasmas were used for SIP, twelve surface proteins were detected, eight of which correspond to bands identified by the other methods. A protein of 89 KDa in strain BR3 was not universally detected in otherS. citri strains and spiroplasma species.  相似文献   

13.
Antibodies are known to affect the morphology, growth, and metabolism of mollicutes and thus may serve as candidate molecules for a plantibody-based control strategy for plant-pathogenic spiroplasmas and phytoplasmas. Recombinant single-chain variable fragment (scFv) antibodies are easy to engineer and express in plants, but their inhibitory effects on mollicutes have never been evaluated and compared with those of polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies. We describe the morphology, growth, and glucose metabolism of Spiroplasma citri in the presence of polyclonal, monoclonal, and recombinant antibodies directed against the immunodominant membrane protein spiralin. We showed that the scFv antibodies had no effect on S. citri glucose metabolism but were as efficient as polyclonal antibodies in inhibiting S. citri growth in liquid medium. Inhibition of motility was also observed.  相似文献   

14.
A chemically defined medium, LD82, was formulated for in vitro cultivation of spiroplasmas. Medium LD82 supported good growth for four epiphytic and insect-pathogenic spiroplasmas, Spiroplasma floricola 23-6T, Spiroplasma sp. strain SR3, Spiroplasma sp. strain brevi, and Spiroplasma sp. strain AS576, and of the phytopathogenic spiroplasmas Spiroplasma citri Maroc R8A2T and PC1. Titers of all six strains grown in defined medium LD82 reached 2.0 × 109 to 6.0 × 109 CFU/ml of culture. All spiroplasma strains tested formed colonies readily on agar medium LD82. None of the spiroplasmas formed typical fried-egg colonies. All formed diffuse colonies, but the forms of colonies differed somewhat among the spiroplasma strains. In preliminary studies of nutritional requirements, phospholipids slightly enhanced the growth of the epiphytic and insect-pathogenic strains in medium LD82 and were found essential for good growth of S. citri.  相似文献   

15.
The aster leafhopper (Macrosteles fascifrons), injected with an isolate of Spiroplasma citri obtained from brittle root-diseased horseradish (Armoracia rusticana), transmitted the spiroplasma to horseradish and China aster (Callistephus chinensis.) After feeding on plants infected with S. citri, M. fascifrons transmitted the spiroplasma from aster to aster and horseradish, from yellow rocket (Barbarea vulgaris) to aster, and from turnip (Brassica rapa) to turnip. Symptoms in infected horseradish were chlorosis and stunting of newly formed leaves, discoloration of root phloem, and reduced plant growth typical of brittle root disease. Chlorosis, stunting, and asymmetry of young leaves occurred in affected aster and turnip. Flowers of infected aster were small and pale in colour and occasionally showed other symptoms including asymmetry, petal distortion, or light green petals. Spiroplasmas were isolated from all plants showing symptoms. Transmission rates by M. fascifrons which acquired S. citri by feeding on infected plants were very low, but injected leafhoppers transmitted more frequently. This is the first report of the transmission of S. citri from diseased to healthy plants by M. fascifrons.  相似文献   

16.
Diaphorina citri Kuwayama (Hemiptera: Sternorrhyncha: Psyllidae) is a vector of huanglongbing, a disease of citrus that in Asia is caused by ‘Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’ (α‐Proteobacteria) (Las). Acquisition of Las by D. citri appears to be variable, and this variability may be due to the suitability of the host plants and their tissues for acquisition. Therefore, this study aimed to determine the effect of symptom severity of the disease on the feeding behaviour of D. citri. Use of an electrical penetration graph showed that the pathway phase of D. citri consisted of four waveforms, A, B, C, and D; waveforms A and B have not been reported for D. citri before. The remaining waveforms, E1, E2, and G, conform to those described before for D. citri. The duration of the non‐penetration period did not differ between healthy or infected plants. However, in moderately and severely symptomatic plants, the duration of the pathway phase increased, whereas the phloem phase was shorter. In all diseased plants, the times to first and sustained salivation in the phloem were longer than those in control plants, with the times being related to symptom severity. As symptom expression increased, the percentage of time spent by psyllids salivating during the phloem phase increased; however, the percentage of time spent in phloem activities reduced gradually from ca. 74% in the control plants to ca. 8% in the severely symptomatic plants. In contrast, the percentage of time spent on xylem activities increased, as did the proportion of psyllids feeding from xylem. The differences in the durations of the E waveforms on plants showing different levels of symptom expression may account for differences in acquisition found amongst studies; therefore, future work on the acquisition and transmission of Las needs to carefully document symptom expression.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of several continuous tick cell culture lines to support growth of tickborne spiroplasmas (helical, wall-less prokaryotes in the classMollicutes) was assessed. Seven triturates, prepared from pools ofIxodes pacificus ticks naturally infected with theSpiroplasma sp. (group VI) organism, were retrieved from frozen (–70°C) storage and passaged in three distinct tick cell lines, in antibiotic-free tick cell culture medium alone, or in spiroplasma culture medium (SP-4 formulation). Six spiroplasma strains were recovered in the RML-19 cell line fromDermacentor variabilis, and five isolations were made in another cell line (RML-15) from this tick species. None was recovered in aRhipicephalus sanguineus cell line (RML-23), in tick cell culture medium, or in SP-4 broth medium. One of the spiroplasma isolates (Y43) was maintained through four consecutive weekly refeedings of theD. variabilis cell line and for three feedings ofR. sanguineus cells, where numbers of spiroplasmas in cell supernatants reached levels comparable to those obtained in the SP-4 medium.A laboratory-adapted strain (SMCA) ofSpiroplasma mirum, a second helical mollicute of tick origin (the suckling mouse cataract agent), grew in three tick cell lines (RML-15, RML-23, and RML-16 cells fromD. parumapertus), in three mosquito cell lines (fromAedes albopictus, Ae. aegypti, andCulex quinquefasciatus), and in both cell culture medium alone and in SP-4 medium. The organisms survived for 1–2 weeks, but failed to multiply, in cell lines fromC. tritaeniorhynchus, Antheraea eucalypti, orXenopus laevis. Some evidence of cytopathic effect ofS. mirum on tick cell lines was seen, although growth of the organism in mosquito cell cultures was not associated with cell toxicity. The use of arthropod cell lines appears to have value in the primary isolation of arthropod- or insect-derived mollicutes and for the study of cytopathogenicity of these wall-less prokaryotes.  相似文献   

18.
An antiserum made against sodium dodecyl sulfate-denatured actin from invertebrates and coupled to horseradish peroxidase specifically stains the wall-free prokaryoteSpiroplasma citri. The results of experiments with spiroplasmas reported here, coupled with the report of the extraction from them of an actin-like protein, suggest that these highly motile organisms possess an actin-like mediated mechanism of motility.  相似文献   

19.
The plant surface and insect-inhabiting spiroplasmas of group IV, unlike other spiroplasmas, have not been demonstrated to utilize arginine. They require cholesterol for growth, produce spots and films on some media, and do not hydrolize arbutin. Electrophoretic and serological comparisons of strains from North America and Europe indicate the existence of strain differences within group IV. This study provides evidence for the existence of three discrete subgroups, group IV-(1) represented by temperate American strains, group IV-(2) represented by subtropical American strain PPS1, and group IV-(3) represented by Mediterranean and French strains.  相似文献   

20.
Studies designed to measure dispersal capacity of Diaphorina citri Kuwayama (Hemiptera: Liviidae) are needed to provide the epidemiological knowledge necessary to improve management of citrus huanglongbing. In this study, a mark–release–recapture technique was used to investigate whether 1) host or non‐host plants of D. citri can act as barriers for dispersing insects and 2) presence or absence of young citrus leaves influence movement of D. citri towards citrus plants. The experimental field consisted of four circular and adjacent areas containing citrus trees, Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck cv. ‘Hamlin’, planted in concentric circles at 18, 24 and 30 m from the release centre. Insect activity was monitored by recapturing at each distance using yellow stick traps. Dense plantings of tall non‐host plants of D. citri such as corn had no effect on insect dispersal towards citrus plants when compared to a shorter cover crop such as grass. In contrast, suitable host plants acted as traps decreasing movement of D. citri. Diaphorina citri dispersed at greater speeds in the absence of young leaves reaching 140 m within 6 hours after release, whereas in the presence of young leaves, individuals reached at most 60 m at 1 day after release. Results suggest that D. citri control measures may be more efficient during periods of highest vegetative activity when insects are less active. Moreover, the use of suitable host plants for D. citri as trap plants may be a potential tactic to prevent movement of insects into the crop.  相似文献   

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