Journal
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 116, Issue 1, Pages 45-56Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10658-006-9036-1
Keywords
bacterial canker; detection; hypovirulent; MAb Cmm1; non-virulent; seed testing
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Specificity of a monoclonal antibody (MAb), Cmm1, to geographically diverse strains of the seed-borne tomato pathogen, Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. michiganensis (Cmm), was assessed and the MAb was tested for its usefulness as a tool to separate the pathogen from saprophytes in naturally infested tomato seed. Of the 236 international Cmm strains tested, 99% reacted with MAb Cmm1. MAb Cmm1 was also strongly reactive with an additional 32 strains isolated from seed that were later identified as Cmm by the Biolog MicroLog (TM) microbial identification system (Biolog, Inc., Hayward, CA) and 16S rDNA sequence analysis. It correctly differentiated these strains from 12 MAb Cmm1-negative seed strains that possessed similar colony morphology but were later identified as other Gram-positive genera and species. The specificity of MAb Cmm1 to the pathogen and the near universality of the MAb Cmm1-reactive antigen among diverse Cmm strains make this antibody a useful detection and identification tool. The finding that a large proportion of the Cmm strains associated with naturally infested tomato seed were putatively hypovirulent or non-virulent indicates that such populations cannot be ignored and points to a need for studies to determine their significance in host-pathogen interactions.
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