4.5 Article

Soft rot inciting Pectobacterium carotovorum (syn. Erwinia carotovora) is unlikely to be transmitted as a latent pathogen in micropropagated banana

Journal

PLANT CELL TISSUE AND ORGAN CULTURE
Volume 105, Issue 3, Pages 423-429

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11240-010-9882-6

Keywords

Banana; Covert bacteria; Endophyte; Erwinia carotovora; Latent pathogen; Micropropagation; Musa sp.; Pectobacterium carotovorum

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This study was undertaken to ascertain if the soft rot inciting Pectobacterium carotovorum/Erwinia carotovora would pass through the micropropagated bananas as a latent pathogen and cause disease during or post acclimatization. In vitro cultures of 'Grand Naine' were exposed to the pathogen by providing 100 mu l of inoculum (0.001-1.0 at OD600 nm) at the lower leaf axil. These cultures showed a gradual development of soft rot symptoms coupled with obvious bacterial colony growth on banana proliferation medium and consequent plant mortality within a month irrespective of the inoculum level employed. Plants carried forward to acclimatization following inoculation in vitro failed to establish ex vitro. Monitoring the normal field-grown suckers at culture initiation through PCR screening employing soft rot Erwinia primers did not show the amplification of the 119-bp fragment as seen with the pure cultures of pathogen. Further testing of micropropagated banana plants through soil inoculation, in vitro culturing and PCR screening ruled out the possibility of the pathogen surviving in micropropagated stocks in latent form as the organism outgrew and killed the cultures. It emerged that the infection possibly takes place in the nursery. This information will be of particular value for the plant tissue culture industry, plant pathologists and quarantine agencies.

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