4.5 Article

Screening potential insect vectors in a museum biorepository reveals undiscovered diversity of plant pathogens in natural areas

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages 6493-6503

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7502

Keywords

coevolution; emerging disease; leafhoppers; phytoplasma; vector‐ borne pathogens

Funding

  1. US Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service [8042-22000-306-00D]
  2. National Science Foundation [DEB-1639601]
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation [P2NEP3_168526]
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [P2NEP3_168526] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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This study revealed that museum collections of herbivorous insects can be a valuable resource for discovering new plant pathogens, unknown phytoplasma strains exist in natural habitats worldwide, posing a potential threat to agricultural systems.
Phytoplasmas (Mollicutes, Acholeplasmataceae), vector-borne obligate bacterial plant parasites, infect nearly 1,000 plant species and unknown numbers of insects, mainly leafhoppers (Hemiptera, Deltocephalinae), which play a key role in transmission and epidemiology. Although the plant-phytoplasma-insect association has been evolving for >300 million years, nearly all known phytoplasmas have been discovered as a result of the damage inflicted by phytoplasma diseases on crops. Few efforts have been made to study phytoplasmas occurring in noneconomically important plants in natural habitats. In this study, a subsample of leafhopper specimens preserved in a large museum biorepository was analyzed to unveil potential new associations. PCR screening for phytoplasmas performed on 227 phloem-feeding leafhoppers collected worldwide from natural habitats revealed the presence of 6 different previously unknown phytoplasma strains. This indicates that museum collections of herbivorous insects represent a rich and largely untapped resource for discovery of new plant pathogens, that natural areas worldwide harbor a diverse but largely undiscovered diversity of phytoplasmas and potential insect vectors, and that independent epidemiological cycles occur in such habitats, posing a potential threat of disease spillover into agricultural systems. Larger-scale future investigations will contribute to a better understanding of phytoplasma genetic diversity, insect host range, and insect-borne phytoplasma transmission and provide an early warning for the emergence of new phytoplasma diseases across global agroecosystems.

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