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Pantoea ananatis: an unconventional plant pathogen

Journal

MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages 325-335

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/J.1364-3703.2009.00542.X

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Funding

  1. National Research Foundation (NRF)
  2. THRIP initiative of the Department of Trade and Industry

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Pantoea ananatis causes disease symptoms in a wide range of economically important agricultural crops and forest tree species worldwide. It is regarded as an emerging pathogen based on the increasing number of reports of diseases occurring on previously unrecorded hosts in different parts of the world. Its unconventional nature lies in the fact that, unlike the majority of plant pathogenic microbes, P. ananatis is capable of infecting humans and occurs in diverse ecological niches, such as part of a bacterial community contaminating aviation jet fuel tanks and contributing to growth promotion in potato and pepper. Bacteria; Gammaproteobacteria; family Enterobacteriaceae; genus Pantoea. Gram-negative; facultatively anaerobic; most strains are motile and produce a yellow pigment in culture; indole positive. Pantoea ananatis is a common epiphyte; it also occurs endophytically in hosts where it has been reported to cause disease symptoms and in hosts where no such symptoms have been described. Some strains are ice-nucleating, a feature which has been used as a biological control mechanism against some insect pests of agricultural crops and by the food industry. Pantoea ananatis infects both monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants. The symptoms are diverse depending on the host infected, and include leaf blotches and spots, die-back, and stalk, fruit and bulb rot. Pantoea ananatis has both antifungal and antibacterial properties. These characteristics have the potential of being exploited by biological control specialists.

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