New Disease Reports (2008) 18, 1.

Tussilago farfara: a new natural host of stolbur phytoplasma

G. Romanazzi 1*, D. D’Ascenzo 2 and S. Murolo 1

*g.romanazzi@univpm.it

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Accepted: 18 Aug 2008

Coltsfoot (Tussilago farfara) is a perennial herb with a creeping rhizome and long runners. It is an invasive weed that prefers heavy clay soils throughout Europe, North Africa, Asia and the USA. Bois noir (BN), is caused by a phytoplasma belonging to the stolbur group (16SrXII-A). It is spread in the main Italian viticultural areas and it is common in vineyards of the Abruzzi region (Romanazzi et al., 2007). BN is transmitted to grapevines by its vector, Hyalesthes obsoletus, which can feed on BN-infected wild plants.

In 2007, during a survey carried out in a cv Chardonnay vineyard at Atri (TE) in the Abruzzi region in which 30% of plants were infected with BN (Romanazzi et al., 2007), naturally ocurring T. farfara plants were collected. Most of these showed typical symptoms ascribed to phytoplasma infection, such as foliar reddening and rolling (Fig. 1). The DNA was extracted from leaf samples of five symptomatic and three symptomless T. farfara plants using the DNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany). The samples were amplified with the P1/P7 universal primers and nested-PCR was carried out with group-specific primers: R16(I)F1/R1, R16(III)F1/R2 and R16(V)F1/R1. Five-µl aliquots of the R16(I)F1/R1 amplicon were digested with 3 U restriction endonuclease MseI (New England BioLabs), overnight at 37°C. Further molecular characterization was carried out by amplifying the tuf gene in nested-PCR and digesting the amplicon with 3 U HpaII (New England BioLabs), overnight at 37 °C (Langer and Maixner, 2004).

All five symptomatic samples of T. farfara were infected by stolbur, showing an identical restriction pattern to that in the reference strain (STOL, kindly provided by C. Marzachì, IVV-CNR, Turin, Italy). No other phytoplasmas were detected. The pathogen was not found in samples from the three symptomless plants. However these developed disease symptoms when inoculated by grafting with samples from infected symptomatic ones. Leaf samples from these artificially inoculated plants tested positive for the presence of the phytoplasma. The molecular characterization of the stolbur isolates revealed tuf type II infections (Fig. 2) (Langer and Maixner, 2004).

Several infections with phytoplasma have been detected on different yellows diseased weeds in Italy (Credi et al., 2006; Borgo et al., 2008), although stolbur infection of T. farfara has not previously been reported. Information on weeds that are potential sources of the BN phytoplasmas in vineyards is important for disease management and this is the first report of stolbur infection in symptomatic T. farfara in Italy, and worldwide.

Figure1+
Figure 1: Plant of Tussilago farfara showing foliar reddening and rolling due to infection by stolbur phytoplasma
Figure 1: Plant of Tussilago farfara showing foliar reddening and rolling due to infection by stolbur phytoplasma
Figure2+
Figure 2: HpaII RFLP pattern of fTufAY⁄rTufAY amplicons obtained from BN-infected plants. M: 100 bp marker (Invitrogen), lane 1: Stolbur (subgroup 16SrXII-A, tuf type II), lanes 2-3: Tussilago farfara samples (tuf type II), lane 4: grapevine cv Chardonnay (tuf type II), lanes 5-6: grapevine cv Chardonnay samples (tuf type I), lane 7: water control.
Figure 2: HpaII RFLP pattern of fTufAY⁄rTufAY amplicons obtained from BN-infected plants. M: 100 bp marker (Invitrogen), lane 1: Stolbur (subgroup 16SrXII-A, tuf type II), lanes 2-3: Tussilago farfara samples (tuf type II), lane 4: grapevine cv Chardonnay (tuf type II), lanes 5-6: grapevine cv Chardonnay samples (tuf type I), lane 7: water control.

Acknowledgements

Work carried out within the project “Grapevine yellows” of the Abruzzi Region. Thanks to Dr Silvia Zitti for species identification.


References

  1. Borgo M, Albanese G, Quaglino F, Casati P, Ermacora P, Ferretti L, Ferrini F, Filippin L, Pasquini G, Angelini E, 2008. Role of other plants in the epidemiology of phytoplasmas associated to Flavescence dorée and Bois noir. Petria 18, 84-86.
  2. Credi R, Terlizzi F, Milanesi L, Bondavalli R, Cavallini G, Montermini A, Dradi D, 2006. Wild host plants of stolbur phytoplasma and its vector, Hyalesthes obsoletus, at sites of grapevine bois noir occurrence in Emilia-Romagna, Italy. Extended abstracts, 15th Meeting of the International Council for the Study of Virus and Virus-like Diseases of the Grapevine, Stellenbosch, South Africa, 182-183.
  3. Romanazzi G, Murolo S, D’Ascenzo D, Di Giovanni R, 2007. New findings on the spread of grapevine yellows in Abruzzi region, central-eastern Italy. Italus Hortus 14, 253-256.
  4. Langer M, Maixner M, 2004. Molecular characterisation of Grapevine yellows associated phytoplasmas of the stolbur-group based on RFLP-analysis of non-ribosomal DNA. Vitis 43, 191-200.

This report was formally published in Plant Pathology

©2008 The Authors