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Xylella fastidiosa

Xylella fastidiosa is an aerobic, Gram-negative bacterium of the genus Xylella.[1] It is a plant pathogen, that grows in the water transport tissues of plants' (xylem vessels) and is transmitted exclusively by xylem sap-feeding insects such as sharpshooters and spittlebugs.[1][2][3][4] Many plant diseases are due to infections of X. fastidiosa, including bacterial leaf scorch, oleander leaf scorch, coffee leaf scorch (CLS), alfalfa dwarf, phony peach disease, and the economically important Pierce's disease of grapes (PD),[5] olive quick decline syndrome (OQDS),[6][7] and citrus variegated chlorosis (CVC).[8] While the largest outbreaks of X. fastidiosa–related diseases have occurred in the Americas and Europe, this pathogen has also been found in Taiwan, Israel, and a few other countries worldwide.[9][10]

Xylella fastidiosa
Scientific classification
Domain:
Phylum:
Class:
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Genus:
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X. fastidiosa
Binomial name
Xylella fastidiosa
Wells et al., 1987

Xylella fastidiosa can infect an extremely wide range of plants, many of which do not show any symptoms of disease.[11] Disease occurs in plant species that are susceptible due to blockage of water flow in the xylem vessels caused by several factors: bacterial obstruction, overreaction of the plant immune response (tylose formation), and formation of air embolisms.[12][13][14] A strain of X. fastidiosa responsible for citrus variegated chlorosis was the first bacterial plant pathogen to have its genome sequenced, in part because of its importance in agriculture.[15] Due to the significant impacts of this pathogen on agricultural crops around the world there is substantial investment in scientific research related to X. fastidiosa and the diseases it causes.[16]

Pathogen anatomy and disease cycle edit

Xylella fastidiosa is rod-shaped, and at least one subspecies has two types of pili on only one pole; longer, type IV pili are used for locomotion, while shorter, type I pili assist in biofilm formation inside their hosts. As demonstrated using a PD-related strain, the bacterium has a characteristic twitching motion that enables groups of bacteria to travel upstream against heavy flow, such as that found in xylem vessels.[17] It is obligately insect-vector transmitted from xylem-feeding insects directly into xylem, but infected plant material for vegetative propagation (e.g. grafting) can produce mature plants that also have an X. fastidiosa disease.[18] In the wild, infections tend to occur during warmer seasons, when insect vector populations peak. The bacterium is not seed transmitted, but instead is transmitted through "xylem feed-ing, suctorial homopteran insects such as sharpshooter leafhoppers and spittle bugs"[19] and has been historically difficult to culture (fastidious),[20][21] as its specific epithet, fastidiosa, reflects.

X. fastidiosa can be divided into four subspecies that affect different plants and have separate origins. X. fastidiosa subsp. fastidiosa is the most studied subspecies, as it is the causal agent of PD; it is thought to have originated in southern Central America, and also affects other species of plants. X. f. multiplex affects many trees, including stone-fruit ones such as peaches and plums, and is thought to originate in temperate and southern North America. X. f. pauca is believed to have originated in South America. It is the causal agent of citrus variegated chlorosis (CVC) in Brazil[22] and also affects South American coffee crops, causing coffee leaf scorch. X. f. sandyi is thought to have originated in the southern part of the United States, and is notable for causing oleander leaf scorch.[23]

X. fastidiosa has a two-part lifecycle, which occurs inside an insect vector and inside a susceptible plant. While the bacterium has been found across the globe, only once the bacterium reaches systemic levels do symptoms present themselves. Once established in a new region, X. fastidiosa spread is dependent on the obligate transmission by xylem-sap feeding insect.[24] Within susceptible plant hosts, X. fastidiosa forms a biofilm-like layer within xylem cells and tracheary elements that can completely block the water transport in affected vessels.[25]

Strains edit

EB92-1 is a nonpathogenic strain of X. f. which is used as a biocontrol of its relatives.[26] (Really it is dramatically less pathogenic. It does colonize grape vines but rarely and less severely.)[26] Zhang et al., 2011 finds very little genomic distance between pathogenic and EB92-1 strains.[26]

Symptoms edit

Significant variation in symptoms is seen between diseases, though some symptoms are expressed across species. On a macroscopic scale, plants infected with a X. fastidiosa-related disease exhibit symptoms of water, zinc, and iron deficiencies,[27] manifesting as leaf scorching and stunting in leaves turning them yellowish-brown, gummy substance around leaves,[27] fruit reduction in size and quality,[27] and overall plant height. As the bacterium progressively colonizes xylem tissues, affected plants often block off their xylem tissue, which can limit the spread of this pathogen; blocking can occur in the form of polysaccharide-rich gels, tyloses, or both. These plant defenses do not seem to hinder the movement of X. fastidiosa. Occlusion of vascular tissue, while a normal plant response to infection, makes symptoms significantly worse; as the bacterium itself also reduces vascular function, a 90% reduction of vascular hydraulic function was seen in susceptible Vitis vinifera.[28] This bacterium rarely completely blocks vascular tissue. There usually is a slight amount of vascular function that keeps the plant alive, but makes its fruit or branches die, making the specific plant economically nonproductive. This can cause a massive drop on supply of quality fruit.[27] Smaller colonies usually occur throughout a high proportion of xylem vessels of a symptomatic plant.[citation needed]

X. fastidiosa is a Gram-negative, xylem-limited illness that is spread by insects. It can damage a variety of broadleaved tree species that are commonly grown in the United States. X. Fastidiosa can be found in about 600 different plant species.[citation needed]

  • Withering and desiccation of branches
  • Leaf chlorosis
  • Dwarfing or lack of growth of the plant
  • Drooping appearance and shorter internodes
  • Shriveled fruits on infected plants
  • Premature fruit abscission
  • gum-like substance on leave
  • hardening and size reduction of fruit

Pierce's disease edit

Severe PD symptoms include shriveled fruit, leaf scorching, and premature abscission of leaves, with bare petioles remaining on stems.[29]

Citrus variegated chlorosis edit

This disease is named after the characteristic spotty chlorosis on upper sides of citrus leaves. Fruits of infected plants are small and hard.[citation needed]

Leaf scorches edit

In coffee, premature abscission of leaves and fruits is of bigger concern than scorching. Some isolates cause Almond leaf scorch, in California that includes CFBP8071 and M23.[30] Coffee Leaf Scorch (CLS) is a disease caused by the causal agent Xylella fastidiosa that is economically significant in Brazil.[31] Citrus variegated chlorosis (CVC), another significant disease in this region caused by a strain of X. fastidiosa has been shown to infect coffee plants with CLS. The disease has also been found in Costa Rica's Central Valley where it is referred to as ‘crespera’ disease by coffee growers.[32] Symptoms of the bacterial infection in coffee plants feature curling leaf margins, chlorosis and irregularly shaped leaves, stunting and reduced plant growth, and branch atrophy.[32] The disease reduced coffee production by up to 30% in plantations across Brazil.[31] X. fastidiosa was discovered in Apulia, Italy in 2013 for the first time as a destructive disease agent of olive trees and likely came from strains present in asymptomatic plant material imported from Costa Rica. [33]

Environment edit

X. fastidiosa occurs worldwide, though its diseases are most prominent in riparian habitats including the southeastern United States, California, and South America.

Symptoms of X. fastidiosa diseases worsen during hot, dry periods in the summer; lack of water and maximum demand from a full canopy of leaves, combined with symptoms due to disease, stress infected plants to a breaking point. Cold winters can limit the spread of the disease,[21] as it occurs in California, but not in regions with milder winters such as Brazil. Additionally, dry summers seem to delay symptom development of PD in California.[18]

Any conditions that increase vector populations can increase disease incidence, such as seasonal rainfall and forests or tree cover adjacent to crops, which serve as alternate food sources and overwintering locations for leafhoppers.[18]

Alexander Purcell, an expert on X. fastidiosa, hypothesized that plants foreign to X. fastidiosa's area of origin, the neotropical regions, are more susceptible to symptom development. Thus, plants from warmer climates are more resistant to X. fastidiosa disease development, while plants from areas with harsher winters, such as grapes, are more severely affected by this disease.[21]

Host species edit

X. fastidiosa has a very wide host range; as of 2020, its known host range was 595 plant species, with 343 species confirmed by two different detection methods, in 85 botanical families.[34] Most X. fastidiosa host plants are dicots, but it has also been reported in monocots and ginkgo, a gymnosperm. However, the vast majority of host plants remain asymptomatic, making them reservoirs for infection.[citation needed]

Due to the temperate climates of South America and the southeastern and west coast of the United States, X. fastidiosa can be a limiting factor in fruit crop production, particularly for stone fruits in northern Florida and grapes in California.[25] In South America, X. fastidiosa can cause significant losses in the citrus and coffee industries; a third of today's citrus crops in Brazil has CVC symptoms.[29]

X. fastidiosa also colonizes the foreguts of insect vectors, which can be any xylem-feeding insects, often sharpshooters in the Cicadellidae subfamily Cicadellinae.[3][21] After an insect acquires X. fastidiosa, it has a short latent period around 2 hours, then the bacterium is transmissible for a period of a few months or as long as the insect is alive.[citation needed] The bacterium multiplies within its vectors, forming a "bacterial carpet" within the foregut of its host. If the host sheds its foregut during molting, the vector is no longer infected, but can reacquire the pathogen. At present, no evidence shows that the bacterium has any detrimental effect on its insect hosts.

List of Subspecies fastidiosa Susceptible Plants (recreated from EFSA Panel)[34]
Family Genus
Adoxaceae Sambucus
Amaranthaceae Alternanthera, Chenopodium
Anacardiaceae Rhus, Toxicodendron
Apiaceae Conium, Datura, Daucus, Oenanthe
Apocynaceae Nerium, Vinca
Araliaceae Hedera
Asteraceae Ambrosia, Artemisia, Baccharis, Callistephus, Conyza, Franseria, Helianthus, Lactuca, Solidago, Sonchus, Xanthium
Betulaceae Alnus
Boraginaceae Amsinckia
Brassicaceae Brassica
Cannaceae Canna
Caprifoliaceae Lonicera, Symphoricarpos
Convolvulaceae Convolvulus, Ipomoea
Cyperaceae Cyperus
Fabaceae Acacia, Chamaecrista, Cytisus, Genista, Lathyrus, Lupinus, Medicago, Melilotus, Spartium, Trifolium, Vicia
Fagaceae Quercus
Geraniaceae Erodium, Pelargonium
Juglandaceae Juglans
Lamiaceae Callicarpa, Origanum, Melissa, Mentha, Rosmarinus, Salvia
Lauraceae Persea, Umbellularia
Magnoliaceae Magnolia
Malvaceae Malva
Myrtaceae Eucalyptus, Eugenia, Metrosideros
Oleaceae Fraxinus, Syringa
Onagraceae Epilobium, Fuchsia, Clarkia, Oenothera
Pittosporaceae Pittosporum
Platanaceae Platanus
Poaceae Avena, Bromus, Cynodon, Digitaria, Echinochloa, Eragrostis, Eriochola, Festuca, Holcus, Hordeum, Lolium, Paspalum, Pennisetum, Phalaris, Phleum, Poa, Setaria, Sorghum
Polygonaceae Persicaria, Polygonum, Rheum, Rumex
Portulacaceae Montia, Portulaca
Resedaceae Reseda
Rhamnaceae Rhamnus
Rosaceae Cotoneaster, Fragaria, Photinia, Prunus, Rosa, Rubus
Rubiaceae Coffea, Coprosma
Rutaceae Citrus
Salicaceae Populus, Salix
Sapindaceae Acer, Aesculus
Scrophulariaceae Veronica
Simmondsiaceae Simmondsia
Solanaceae Datura, Lycopersicon, Nicotiana, Solanum
Urticaceae Urtica
Verbenaceae Duranta
Vitaceae Ampelopsis, Parthenocissus, Vitis

Oleander edit

Oleander leaf scorch is a disease of landscape oleanders (Nerium oleander) caused by a X. fastidiosa strain that has become prevalent in California and Arizona, starting in the mid-1990s. This disease is transmitted by a type of leafhopper (insect) called the glassy-winged sharpshooter (Homalodisca coagulata). Oleander is commonly used in decorative landscaping in California, so the plants serve as widely distributed reservoirs for Xylella.[citation needed]

Both almond and oleander plants in the Italian region of Apulia have also tested positive for the pathogen.[35]

Grape vines edit

Pierce's disease (PD) was discovered in 1892[36] by Newton B. Pierce (1856–1916; California's first professional plant pathologist) on grapes in California near Anaheim,[22] where it was known as "Anaheim disease".[37] The disease is endemic in Northern California, being spread by the blue-green sharpshooter, which attacks only grapevines adjacent to riparian habitats. It became a real threat to California's wine industry when the glassy-winged sharpshooter, native to the Southeast United States, was discovered in the Temecula Valley in California in 1996; it spreads PD much more extensively than other vectors.[38]

Symptoms of infection on grape vines edit

When a grape vine becomes infected, the bacterium causes a gel to form in the xylem tissue of the vine, preventing water from being drawn through the vine.[39] Leaves on vines with Pierce's disease turn yellow and brown, and eventually drop off the vine. Shoots also die. After one to five years, the vine itself dies. The proximity of vineyards to citrus groves compounds the threat, because citrus is not only a host of sharpshooter eggs, but also is a popular overwintering site for this insect.[40]

Collaborative efforts for solutions edit

In a unique effort, growers, administrators, policy makers, and researchers are working on a solution for this immense X. fastidiosa threat. No cure has been found,[41] but the understanding of X. fastidiosa and glassy-winged sharpshooter biology has markedly increased since 2000, when the California Department of Food and Agriculture, in collaboration with different universities, such as University of California, Davis; University of California, Berkeley; University of California, Riverside, and University of Houston–Downtown started to focus their research on this pest. The research explores the different aspects of the disease propagation from the vector to the host plant and within the host plant, to the impact of the disease on California's economy. All researchers working on Pierce's disease meet annually in San Diego in mid-December to discuss the progress in their field. All proceedings from this symposium can be found on the Pierce's disease website,[42] developed and managed by the Public Intellectual Property Resource for Agriculture (PIPRA).[43]

Few resistant Vitis vinifera varieties are known, and Chardonnay and Pinot noir are especially susceptible, but muscadine grapes (V. rotundifolia) have a natural resistance.[41] Pierce's disease is found in the Southeastern United States and Mexico. Also, it was reported by Luis G. Jiménez-Arias in Costa Rica, and Venezuela,[44] and possibly in other parts of Central and South America. In 2010, X. fastidiosa became apparent in Europe, posing a serious, real threat.[45] There are isolated hot spots of the disease near creeks in Napa and Sonoma in Northern California.[41] Work is underway at UC Davis to breed PD resistance from V. rotundifolia into V. vinifera. The first generation was 50% high-quality V. vinifera genes, the next 75%, the third 87% and the fourth 94%. In the spring of 2007, seedlings that are 94% V. vinifera were planted.[46]

A resistant variety, 'Victoria Red', was released for use especially in Coastal Texas.[47]

 
Nerium oleander infected with X. fastidiosa in Phoenix, Arizona

Olive trees edit

 
An olive grove infested with X. fastidiosa in Puglia, Italy in 2019

In October 2013, the bacterium was found infecting olive trees in the region of Apulia in southern Italy.[35] The disease caused rapid decline in olive grove yields, and by April 2015, was affecting the whole Province of Lecce and other zones of Apulia,[7][48] though it had not previously been confirmed in Europe.[49] The subspecies involved in Italy is X. f. pauca, which shows a marked preference for olive trees and warm conditions and is thought to be unlikely to spread to Northern Europe.[50]

The cycle in olives has been called olive quick decline syndrome (in Italian: complesso del disseccamento rapido dell'olivo).[49][51] The disease causes withering and desiccation of terminal shoots, distributed randomly at first but then expanding to the rest of the canopy[51] resulting in the collapse and death of trees.[51] In affected groves, all plants normally show symptoms.[51] The most severely affected olives are the century-old trees of local cultivars Cellina di Nardò and Ogliarola salentina.[52]

By 2015, the disease had infected up to a million olive trees in Apulia [53] and Xylella fastidiosa had reached Corsica,[54] By October 2015, it had reached Mainland France, near Nice, in Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, affecting the non-native myrtle-leaf milkwort (Polygala myrtifolia). This is the subspecies X. fastidiosa subsp. multiplex which is considered to be a different genetic variant of the bacterium to that found in Italy.[55][56] On 18 August 2016 in Corsica, 279 foci of the infection have been detected, concentrated mostly in the south and the west of the island.[57] In August 2016, the bacterium was detected in Germany in an oleander plant.[58] In January 2017 it was detected in Mallorca and Ibiza.[59]

Notably, in 2016, olive leaf scorch was first detected in X. fastidiosa's native range, in Brazil.[22]

In June 2017, it was detected in the Iberian peninsula, specifically in Guadalest, Alicante.[60] In 2018, it was detected in Spain [61] and Portugal,[62] and in Israel in 2019.[63]

Citrus edit

Xylella infection was detected in South American citrus in the 1980s and subsequently in the USA but had limited spread beyond the America's until the detection in citrus groves in Portugal in 2023.[64]

Genome sequencing edit

The genome of X. fastidiosa was sequenced by a pool of over 30 research laboratories in the state of São Paulo, Brazil, funded by the São Paulo Research Foundation.[65]

In popular culture edit

Two episodes of the Canadian television show ReGenesis investigated X. fastidiosa, the cause of a massive loss in Florida orange groves.[66]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • "CDFA - Pierce's Disease Research Updates". piercesdisease.cdfa.ca.gov. Retrieved 2020-02-15.
  • . December 2002. Archived from the original on 2006-05-09. Retrieved 2020-02-15.
  • CDFA PD/GWSS Board Website PD/GWSS Interactive Forum
  • . July 10, 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-09-18. Retrieved 2020-02-15.
  • Wells, J. M.; Raju, B. C.; Hung, H.-Y.; Weisburg, W. G.; Mandelco-Paul, L.; Brenner, D. J. (1987-04-01). "Xylella fastidiosa gen. nov., sp. nov: Gram-Negative, Xylem-Limited, Fastidious Plant Bacteria Related to Xanthomonas spp". International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology. 37 (2): 136–143. doi:10.1099/00207713-37-2-136. ISSN 0020-7713.
  • Catalano, Luigi (2015). (PDF). L'Informatore Agrario (in Italian) (16): 36–42. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-06-18. Retrieved 2020-02-15.

External links edit

  • Type strain of Xylella fastidiosa at BacDive - the Bacterial Diversity Metadatabase
  • "XF-ACTORS". XF-ACTORS (Xylella Fastidiosa Active Containment Through a multidisciplinary-Oriented Research Strategy). 2021-02-02. Retrieved 2021-03-30.
  • "XF-ACTORS "Xylella Fastidiosa Active Containment Through a multidisciplinary-Oriented Research"". EIP-AGRI - European Commission. 2017-08-30. Retrieved 2021-03-30.

xylella, fastidiosa, aerobic, gram, negative, bacterium, genus, xylella, plant, pathogen, that, grows, water, transport, tissues, plants, xylem, vessels, transmitted, exclusively, xylem, feeding, insects, such, sharpshooters, spittlebugs, many, plant, diseases. Xylella fastidiosa is an aerobic Gram negative bacterium of the genus Xylella 1 It is a plant pathogen that grows in the water transport tissues of plants xylem vessels and is transmitted exclusively by xylem sap feeding insects such as sharpshooters and spittlebugs 1 2 3 4 Many plant diseases are due to infections of X fastidiosa including bacterial leaf scorch oleander leaf scorch coffee leaf scorch CLS alfalfa dwarf phony peach disease and the economically important Pierce s disease of grapes PD 5 olive quick decline syndrome OQDS 6 7 and citrus variegated chlorosis CVC 8 While the largest outbreaks of X fastidiosa related diseases have occurred in the Americas and Europe this pathogen has also been found in Taiwan Israel and a few other countries worldwide 9 10 Xylella fastidiosaScientific classificationDomain BacteriaPhylum PseudomonadotaClass GammaproteobacteriaOrder XanthomonadalesFamily XanthomonadaceaeGenus XylellaSpecies X fastidiosaBinomial nameXylella fastidiosaWells et al 1987Xylella fastidiosa can infect an extremely wide range of plants many of which do not show any symptoms of disease 11 Disease occurs in plant species that are susceptible due to blockage of water flow in the xylem vessels caused by several factors bacterial obstruction overreaction of the plant immune response tylose formation and formation of air embolisms 12 13 14 A strain of X fastidiosa responsible for citrus variegated chlorosis was the first bacterial plant pathogen to have its genome sequenced in part because of its importance in agriculture 15 Due to the significant impacts of this pathogen on agricultural crops around the world there is substantial investment in scientific research related to X fastidiosa and the diseases it causes 16 Contents 1 Pathogen anatomy and disease cycle 2 Strains 3 Symptoms 3 1 Pierce s disease 3 2 Citrus variegated chlorosis 3 3 Leaf scorches 4 Environment 5 Host species 5 1 Oleander 5 2 Grape vines 5 2 1 Symptoms of infection on grape vines 5 2 2 Collaborative efforts for solutions 5 3 Olive trees 5 4 Citrus 6 Genome sequencing 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPathogen anatomy and disease cycle editXylella fastidiosa is rod shaped and at least one subspecies has two types of pili on only one pole longer type IV pili are used for locomotion while shorter type I pili assist in biofilm formation inside their hosts As demonstrated using a PD related strain the bacterium has a characteristic twitching motion that enables groups of bacteria to travel upstream against heavy flow such as that found in xylem vessels 17 It is obligately insect vector transmitted from xylem feeding insects directly into xylem but infected plant material for vegetative propagation e g grafting can produce mature plants that also have an X fastidiosa disease 18 In the wild infections tend to occur during warmer seasons when insect vector populations peak The bacterium is not seed transmitted but instead is transmitted through xylem feed ing suctorial homopteran insects such as sharpshooter leafhoppers and spittle bugs 19 and has been historically difficult to culture fastidious 20 21 as its specific epithet fastidiosa reflects X fastidiosa can be divided into four subspecies that affect different plants and have separate origins X fastidiosa subsp fastidiosa is the most studied subspecies as it is the causal agent of PD it is thought to have originated in southern Central America and also affects other species of plants X f multiplex affects many trees including stone fruit ones such as peaches and plums and is thought to originate in temperate and southern North America X f pauca is believed to have originated in South America It is the causal agent of citrus variegated chlorosis CVC in Brazil 22 and also affects South American coffee crops causing coffee leaf scorch X f sandyi is thought to have originated in the southern part of the United States and is notable for causing oleander leaf scorch 23 X fastidiosa has a two part lifecycle which occurs inside an insect vector and inside a susceptible plant While the bacterium has been found across the globe only once the bacterium reaches systemic levels do symptoms present themselves Once established in a new region X fastidiosa spread is dependent on the obligate transmission by xylem sap feeding insect 24 Within susceptible plant hosts X fastidiosa forms a biofilm like layer within xylem cells and tracheary elements that can completely block the water transport in affected vessels 25 Strains editEB92 1 is a nonpathogenic strain of X f which is used as a biocontrol of its relatives 26 Really it is dramatically less pathogenic It does colonize grape vines but rarely and less severely 26 Zhang et al 2011 finds very little genomic distance between pathogenic and EB92 1 strains 26 Symptoms editSignificant variation in symptoms is seen between diseases though some symptoms are expressed across species On a macroscopic scale plants infected with a X fastidiosa related disease exhibit symptoms of water zinc and iron deficiencies 27 manifesting as leaf scorching and stunting in leaves turning them yellowish brown gummy substance around leaves 27 fruit reduction in size and quality 27 and overall plant height As the bacterium progressively colonizes xylem tissues affected plants often block off their xylem tissue which can limit the spread of this pathogen blocking can occur in the form of polysaccharide rich gels tyloses or both These plant defenses do not seem to hinder the movement of X fastidiosa Occlusion of vascular tissue while a normal plant response to infection makes symptoms significantly worse as the bacterium itself also reduces vascular function a 90 reduction of vascular hydraulic function was seen in susceptible Vitis vinifera 28 This bacterium rarely completely blocks vascular tissue There usually is a slight amount of vascular function that keeps the plant alive but makes its fruit or branches die making the specific plant economically nonproductive This can cause a massive drop on supply of quality fruit 27 Smaller colonies usually occur throughout a high proportion of xylem vessels of a symptomatic plant citation needed X fastidiosa is a Gram negative xylem limited illness that is spread by insects It can damage a variety of broadleaved tree species that are commonly grown in the United States X Fastidiosa can be found in about 600 different plant species citation needed Withering and desiccation of branches Leaf chlorosis Dwarfing or lack of growth of the plant Drooping appearance and shorter internodes Shriveled fruits on infected plants Premature fruit abscission gum like substance on leave hardening and size reduction of fruitPierce s disease edit Severe PD symptoms include shriveled fruit leaf scorching and premature abscission of leaves with bare petioles remaining on stems 29 Citrus variegated chlorosis edit This disease is named after the characteristic spotty chlorosis on upper sides of citrus leaves Fruits of infected plants are small and hard citation needed Leaf scorches edit In coffee premature abscission of leaves and fruits is of bigger concern than scorching Some isolates cause Almond leaf scorch in California that includes CFBP8071 and M23 30 Coffee Leaf Scorch CLS is a disease caused by the causal agent Xylella fastidiosa that is economically significant in Brazil 31 Citrus variegated chlorosis CVC another significant disease in this region caused by a strain of X fastidiosa has been shown to infect coffee plants with CLS The disease has also been found in Costa Rica s Central Valley where it is referred to as crespera disease by coffee growers 32 Symptoms of the bacterial infection in coffee plants feature curling leaf margins chlorosis and irregularly shaped leaves stunting and reduced plant growth and branch atrophy 32 The disease reduced coffee production by up to 30 in plantations across Brazil 31 X fastidiosa was discovered in Apulia Italy in 2013 for the first time as a destructive disease agent of olive trees and likely came from strains present in asymptomatic plant material imported from Costa Rica 33 Environment editX fastidiosa occurs worldwide though its diseases are most prominent in riparian habitats including the southeastern United States California and South America Symptoms of X fastidiosa diseases worsen during hot dry periods in the summer lack of water and maximum demand from a full canopy of leaves combined with symptoms due to disease stress infected plants to a breaking point Cold winters can limit the spread of the disease 21 as it occurs in California but not in regions with milder winters such as Brazil Additionally dry summers seem to delay symptom development of PD in California 18 Any conditions that increase vector populations can increase disease incidence such as seasonal rainfall and forests or tree cover adjacent to crops which serve as alternate food sources and overwintering locations for leafhoppers 18 Alexander Purcell an expert on X fastidiosa hypothesized that plants foreign to X fastidiosa s area of origin the neotropical regions are more susceptible to symptom development Thus plants from warmer climates are more resistant to X fastidiosa disease development while plants from areas with harsher winters such as grapes are more severely affected by this disease 21 Host species editX fastidiosa has a very wide host range as of 2020 its known host range was 595 plant species with 343 species confirmed by two different detection methods in 85 botanical families 34 Most X fastidiosa host plants are dicots but it has also been reported in monocots and ginkgo a gymnosperm However the vast majority of host plants remain asymptomatic making them reservoirs for infection citation needed Due to the temperate climates of South America and the southeastern and west coast of the United States X fastidiosa can be a limiting factor in fruit crop production particularly for stone fruits in northern Florida and grapes in California 25 In South America X fastidiosa can cause significant losses in the citrus and coffee industries a third of today s citrus crops in Brazil has CVC symptoms 29 X fastidiosa also colonizes the foreguts of insect vectors which can be any xylem feeding insects often sharpshooters in the Cicadellidae subfamily Cicadellinae 3 21 After an insect acquires X fastidiosa it has a short latent period around 2 hours then the bacterium is transmissible for a period of a few months or as long as the insect is alive citation needed The bacterium multiplies within its vectors forming a bacterial carpet within the foregut of its host If the host sheds its foregut during molting the vector is no longer infected but can reacquire the pathogen At present no evidence shows that the bacterium has any detrimental effect on its insect hosts List of Subspecies fastidiosa Susceptible Plants recreated from EFSA Panel 34 Family GenusAdoxaceae SambucusAmaranthaceae Alternanthera ChenopodiumAnacardiaceae Rhus ToxicodendronApiaceae Conium Datura Daucus OenantheApocynaceae Nerium VincaAraliaceae HederaAsteraceae Ambrosia Artemisia Baccharis Callistephus Conyza Franseria Helianthus Lactuca Solidago Sonchus XanthiumBetulaceae AlnusBoraginaceae AmsinckiaBrassicaceae BrassicaCannaceae CannaCaprifoliaceae Lonicera SymphoricarposConvolvulaceae Convolvulus IpomoeaCyperaceae CyperusFabaceae Acacia Chamaecrista Cytisus Genista Lathyrus Lupinus Medicago Melilotus Spartium Trifolium ViciaFagaceae QuercusGeraniaceae Erodium PelargoniumJuglandaceae JuglansLamiaceae Callicarpa Origanum Melissa Mentha Rosmarinus SalviaLauraceae Persea UmbellulariaMagnoliaceae MagnoliaMalvaceae MalvaMyrtaceae Eucalyptus Eugenia MetrosiderosOleaceae Fraxinus SyringaOnagraceae Epilobium Fuchsia Clarkia OenotheraPittosporaceae PittosporumPlatanaceae PlatanusPoaceae Avena Bromus Cynodon Digitaria Echinochloa Eragrostis Eriochola Festuca Holcus Hordeum Lolium Paspalum Pennisetum Phalaris Phleum Poa Setaria SorghumPolygonaceae Persicaria Polygonum Rheum RumexPortulacaceae Montia PortulacaResedaceae ResedaRhamnaceae RhamnusRosaceae Cotoneaster Fragaria Photinia Prunus Rosa RubusRubiaceae Coffea CoprosmaRutaceae CitrusSalicaceae Populus SalixSapindaceae Acer AesculusScrophulariaceae VeronicaSimmondsiaceae SimmondsiaSolanaceae Datura Lycopersicon Nicotiana SolanumUrticaceae UrticaVerbenaceae DurantaVitaceae Ampelopsis Parthenocissus VitisOleander edit Oleander leaf scorch is a disease of landscape oleanders Nerium oleander caused by a X fastidiosa strain that has become prevalent in California and Arizona starting in the mid 1990s This disease is transmitted by a type of leafhopper insect called the glassy winged sharpshooter Homalodisca coagulata Oleander is commonly used in decorative landscaping in California so the plants serve as widely distributed reservoirs for Xylella citation needed Both almond and oleander plants in the Italian region of Apulia have also tested positive for the pathogen 35 Grape vines edit Pierce s disease PD was discovered in 1892 36 by Newton B Pierce 1856 1916 California s first professional plant pathologist on grapes in California near Anaheim 22 where it was known as Anaheim disease 37 The disease is endemic in Northern California being spread by the blue green sharpshooter which attacks only grapevines adjacent to riparian habitats It became a real threat to California s wine industry when the glassy winged sharpshooter native to the Southeast United States was discovered in the Temecula Valley in California in 1996 it spreads PD much more extensively than other vectors 38 Symptoms of infection on grape vines edit When a grape vine becomes infected the bacterium causes a gel to form in the xylem tissue of the vine preventing water from being drawn through the vine 39 Leaves on vines with Pierce s disease turn yellow and brown and eventually drop off the vine Shoots also die After one to five years the vine itself dies The proximity of vineyards to citrus groves compounds the threat because citrus is not only a host of sharpshooter eggs but also is a popular overwintering site for this insect 40 Collaborative efforts for solutions edit In a unique effort growers administrators policy makers and researchers are working on a solution for this immense X fastidiosa threat No cure has been found 41 but the understanding of X fastidiosa and glassy winged sharpshooter biology has markedly increased since 2000 when the California Department of Food and Agriculture in collaboration with different universities such as University of California Davis University of California Berkeley University of California Riverside and University of Houston Downtown started to focus their research on this pest The research explores the different aspects of the disease propagation from the vector to the host plant and within the host plant to the impact of the disease on California s economy All researchers working on Pierce s disease meet annually in San Diego in mid December to discuss the progress in their field All proceedings from this symposium can be found on the Pierce s disease website 42 developed and managed by the Public Intellectual Property Resource for Agriculture PIPRA 43 Few resistant Vitis vinifera varieties are known and Chardonnay and Pinot noir are especially susceptible but muscadine grapes V rotundifolia have a natural resistance 41 Pierce s disease is found in the Southeastern United States and Mexico Also it was reported by Luis G Jimenez Arias in Costa Rica and Venezuela 44 and possibly in other parts of Central and South America In 2010 X fastidiosa became apparent in Europe posing a serious real threat 45 There are isolated hot spots of the disease near creeks in Napa and Sonoma in Northern California 41 Work is underway at UC Davis to breed PD resistance from V rotundifolia into V vinifera The first generation was 50 high quality V vinifera genes the next 75 the third 87 and the fourth 94 In the spring of 2007 seedlings that are 94 V viniferawere planted 46 A resistant variety Victoria Red was released for use especially in Coastal Texas 47 nbsp Nerium oleander infected with X fastidiosa in Phoenix ArizonaOlive trees edit nbsp An olive grove infested with X fastidiosa in Puglia Italy in 2019In October 2013 the bacterium was found infecting olive trees in the region of Apulia in southern Italy 35 The disease caused rapid decline in olive grove yields and by April 2015 was affecting the whole Province of Lecce and other zones of Apulia 7 48 though it had not previously been confirmed in Europe 49 The subspecies involved in Italy is X f pauca which shows a marked preference for olive trees and warm conditions and is thought to be unlikely to spread to Northern Europe 50 The cycle in olives has been called olive quick decline syndrome in Italian complesso del disseccamento rapido dell olivo 49 51 The disease causes withering and desiccation of terminal shoots distributed randomly at first but then expanding to the rest of the canopy 51 resulting in the collapse and death of trees 51 In affected groves all plants normally show symptoms 51 The most severely affected olives are the century old trees of local cultivars Cellina di Nardo and Ogliarola salentina 52 By 2015 the disease had infected up to a million olive trees in Apulia 53 and Xylella fastidiosa had reached Corsica 54 By October 2015 it had reached Mainland France near Nice in Provence Alpes Cote d Azur affecting the non native myrtle leaf milkwort Polygala myrtifolia This is the subspecies X fastidiosa subsp multiplex which is considered to be a different genetic variant of the bacterium to that found in Italy 55 56 On 18 August 2016 in Corsica 279 foci of the infection have been detected concentrated mostly in the south and the west of the island 57 In August 2016 the bacterium was detected in Germany in an oleander plant 58 In January 2017 it was detected in Mallorca and Ibiza 59 Notably in 2016 olive leaf scorch was first detected in X fastidiosa s native range in Brazil 22 In June 2017 it was detected in the Iberian peninsula specifically in Guadalest Alicante 60 In 2018 it was detected in Spain 61 and Portugal 62 and in Israel in 2019 63 Citrus edit Xylella infection was detected in South American citrus in the 1980s and subsequently in the USA but had limited spread beyond the America s until the detection in citrus groves in Portugal in 2023 64 Genome sequencing editThe genome of X fastidiosa was sequenced by a pool of over 30 research laboratories in the state of Sao Paulo Brazil funded by the Sao Paulo Research Foundation 65 In popular culture editTwo episodes of the Canadian television show ReGenesis investigated X fastidiosa the cause of a massive loss in Florida orange groves 66 See also editBacterial leaf scorch Homalodisca vitripennis Philaenus spumariusReferences edit a b Rapicavoli Jeannette Ingel Brian Blanco Ulate Barbara Cantu Dario Roper Caroline April 2018 Xylella fastidiosa an examination of a re emerging plant pathogen Xylella fastidiosa Molecular Plant Pathology 19 4 786 800 doi 10 1111 mpp 12585 PMC 6637975 PMID 28742234 Krugner Rodrigo Sisterson Mark S Backus Elaine A Burbank Lindsey P Redak Richard A May 2019 Sharpshooters a review of what moves Xylella fastidiosa Austral Entomology 58 2 248 267 doi 10 1111 aen 12397 ISSN 2052 174X S2CID 182504242 a b Redak Richard A Purcell Alexander H Lopes Joao R S Blua Matthew J Mizell III Russell F Andersen Peter C 2003 12 03 The biology of xylem fluid feeding insect vectors of Xylella fastidiosa and their relation to disease epidemiology Annual Review of Entomology 49 1 243 270 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 49 061802 123403 ISSN 0066 4170 PMID 14651464 Cornara Daniele Saponari Maria Zeilinger Adam R de Stradis Angelo Boscia Donato Loconsole Giuliana Bosco Domenico Martelli Giovanni P Almeida Rodrigo P P Porcelli Francesco 2017 03 01 Spittlebugs as vectors of Xylella fastidiosa in olive orchards in Italy Journal of Pest Science 90 2 521 530 doi 10 1007 s10340 016 0793 0 ISSN 1612 4766 PMC 5320020 PMID 28275326 Pierce s Disease UC IPM Retrieved 2022 12 04 Martelli G P Boscia D Porcelli F Saponari M 2016 02 01 The olive quick decline syndrome in south east Italy a threatening phytosanitary emergency European Journal of Plant Pathology 144 2 235 243 doi 10 1007 s10658 015 0784 7 ISSN 1573 8469 S2CID 254475576 a b Minimizing the Spread of Disease in Italy s Famous Olive Trees Our Environment at Berkeley University of California Berkeley Department of Environmental Science Policy and Management ESPM 9 February 2015 Retrieved 5 May 2015 Coletta Filho Helvecio Della Castillo Andreina I Laranjeira Francisco Ferraz de Andrade Eduardo Chumbinho Silva Natalia Teixeira de Souza Alessandra Alves Bossi Mariana Esteves Almeida Rodrigo P P Lopes Joao R S 2020 06 01 Citrus Variegated Chlorosis an Overview of 30 Years of Research and Disease Management Tropical Plant Pathology 45 3 175 191 doi 10 1007 s40858 020 00358 5 ISSN 1983 2052 S2CID 218652922 Su Chiou Chu Chang Chung Jan Chang Che Ming Shih Hsien Tzung Tzeng Kuo Ching Jan Fuh Jyh Kao Chin Wen Deng Wen Ling June 2013 Pierce s Disease of Grapevines in Taiwan Isolation Cultivation and Pathogenicity of Xylella fastidiosa Journal of Phytopathology 161 6 389 396 doi 10 1111 jph 12075 Zecharia Noa Krasnov Helena Vanunu Miri Siri Andreina Castillo Haberman Ami Dror Orit Vakal Lera Almeida Rodrigo P P Blank Lior Shtienberg Dani Bahar Ofir November 2022 Xylella fastidiosa Outbreak in Israel Population Genetics Host Range and Temporal and Spatial Distribution Analysis Phytopathology 112 11 2296 2309 doi 10 1094 PHYTO 03 22 0105 R ISSN 0031 949X PMID 35778787 S2CID 250218193 Update of the Xylella spp host plant database systematic literature search up to 30 June 2021 www efsa europa eu 12 January 2022 Retrieved 2022 12 04 Petit Giai Bleve Gianluca Gallo Antonia 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Phytopathology Annual Reviews 56 1 181 202 doi 10 1146 annurev phyto 080417 045849 ISSN 0066 4286 PMID 29889627 S2CID 48353386 AS ORCID 0000 0002 0575 195X Xylella fastidiosa Pierce s disease of grapevines www cabi org Retrieved 2017 11 06 How to access research remotely a b Chatterjee Subhadeep Almeida Rodrigo P P Lindow Steven 2008 08 04 Living in two Worlds The Plant and Insect Lifestyles of Xylella fastidiosa Annual Review of Phytopathology 46 1 243 271 doi 10 1146 annurev phyto 45 062806 094342 ISSN 0066 4286 PMID 18422428 a b c Gross Dennis C Lichens Park Ann Kole Chittaranjan eds 2014 Genomics of plant associated bacteria Heidelberg pp x 278 ISBN 978 3 642 55378 3 OCLC 881817015 ISBN 978 3 642 55377 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link 177 202 Zhang Shujian Flores Cruz Zomary Kumar Dibyendu Chakrabarty Pranjib Hopkins Donald L Gabriel Dean W 2011 The Xylella fastidiosa Biocontrol Strain EB92 1 Genome Is 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A Preliminary Report of Investigations Bulletins Government Printing Office Washington DC US United States Department of Agriculture Division of Vegetable Pathology ISBN 978 1331970958 OCLC 4512989 ISBN 1331970954 Pinney Thomas 1989 A History of Wine in America from the Beginnings to Prohibition University of California Press pp 27 ISBN 978 0520062245 Haviland David R Stone Smith Beth Gonzalez Minerva 2021 01 01 Control of Pierce s Disease Through Areawide Management of Glassy Winged Sharpshooter Hemiptera Cicadellidae and Roguing of Infected Grapevines Journal of Integrated Pest Management 12 1 doi 10 1093 jipm pmab008 ISSN 2155 7470 Pierce s Disease on grapes Texas Plant Disease Diagnostic Lab plantclinic tamu edu Retrieved 2023 05 05 Pollard Herschel N Kaloostian George H 1961 08 01 Overwintering Habits of Homalodisca coagulata the Principal Natural Vector of Phony Peach Disease Virus Journal of Economic Entomology 54 4 810 811 doi 10 1093 jee 54 4 810 ISSN 1938 291X a b c winepros com au Oxford Companion to Wine Pierce s disease Archived from the original on 2008 08 08 Retrieved 2008 05 07 PIPRA Pierce s Disease website Pierce s disease Public Intellectual Property Resource for Agriculture PIPRA Jimenez A L G July September 1985 Evidencia inmunologica del mal de pierce de la vid en Venezuela Turrialba 35 3 243 247 Janse J D Obradovic A 2010 Xylella Fastidiosa ITS Biology Diagnosis Control and Risks Journal of Plant Pathology 92 S35 S48 ISSN 1125 4653 JSTOR 41998754 PD GWSS Board bulletin Archived 2015 05 18 at the Wayback Machine California Department of Food amp Agriculture Spring 2007 p 2 Texas Superstar plants Spagnolo Chiara 2015 04 29 Xylella allarme nuovi focolai per la Ue interessata tutta la Puglia repubblica it La Repubblica Retrieved 8 May 2015 a b First report of Xylella fastidiosa in the EPPO region European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization EPPO Retrieved 1 March 2015 Xylella fastidiosa Plant Health Portal Department for Environment 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Retrieved 23 August 2016 Pflanzen Killerbakterium Teile von Zeulenroda Triebes zur Sperrzone erklart Antenne Thueringen in German Archived from the original on August 27 2016 Retrieved 23 August 2016 La plaga vegetal mas peligrosa de Europa invade las Baleares La Vanguardia in Spanish Retrieved 24 January 2017 Tala preventiva de arboles ante el primer caso de Xylella fastidiosa en la peninsula La Vanguardia in Spanish Retrieved 4 July 2017 Detectada en Madrid la presencia de una bacteria que obligo a arrancar un millon de olivos en Italia 20 Minutos in Spanish Retrieved 12 April 2018 Xylella fastidiosa XYLEFA Portugal EPPO Global Database gd eppo int Retrieved 2020 08 03 Xylella fastidiosa XYLEFA Israel EPPO Global Database gd eppo int Retrieved 2020 08 03 NTC A Punt 2023 01 11 Portugal detecta la Xylella fastidiosa en citrics per primera vegada en la UE A Punt in Catalan Retrieved 2023 01 20 Simpson AJG Reinach FC Arruda P Abreu FA et al July 2000 The genome sequence of the plant pathogen Xylella fastidiosa Nature 406 6792 151 159 Bibcode 2000Natur 406 151S doi 10 1038 35018003 PMID 10910347 Watch ReGenesis Online Season 2 2006 TV Guide 2006 03 19 Retrieved 2021 07 20 Further reading edit CDFA Pierce s Disease Research Updates piercesdisease cdfa ca gov Retrieved 2020 02 15 Glassy winged Sharpshooter and Pierce s Disease in California December 2002 Archived from the original on 2006 05 09 Retrieved 2020 02 15 CDFA PD GWSS Board Website PD GWSS Interactive Forum Oleander leaf scorch July 10 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 09 18 Retrieved 2020 02 15 Wells J M Raju B C Hung H Y Weisburg W G Mandelco Paul L Brenner D J 1987 04 01 Xylella fastidiosa gen nov sp nov Gram Negative Xylem Limited Fastidious Plant Bacteria Related to Xanthomonas spp International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology 37 2 136 143 doi 10 1099 00207713 37 2 136 ISSN 0020 7713 Catalano Luigi 2015 Xylella fastidiosa la piu grave minaccia dell olivicoltura italiana PDF L Informatore Agrario in Italian 16 36 42 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 06 18 Retrieved 2020 02 15 External links edit nbsp Scholia has a topic profile for Xylella fastidiosa Type strain of Xylella fastidiosa at BacDive the Bacterial Diversity Metadatabase XF ACTORS XF ACTORS Xylella Fastidiosa Active Containment Through a multidisciplinary Oriented Research Strategy 2021 02 02 Retrieved 2021 03 30 XF ACTORS Xylella Fastidiosa Active Containment Through a multidisciplinary Oriented Research EIP AGRI European Commission 2017 08 30 Retrieved 2021 03 30 Portal nbsp Drink Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Xylella fastidiosa amp oldid 1174305175 EB92 1, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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