Vascular blackening of wasabi rhizomes caused by Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp carotovorum


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Authors: Rodriguez, G; Punja, ZK
Year: 2009
Journal: European Journal of Plant Pathology 124: 483-493   Article Link (DOI)
Title: Vascular blackening of wasabi rhizomes caused by Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp carotovorum
Abstract: Wasabi (Wasabia japonica) is grown for its highly-valued rhizome which is used as a condiment in Japanese food. Symptoms of vascular blackening in the rhizome were first observed in 2005 in plants grown in British Columbia, Canada. Microscopic observations and microbial isolation from infected tissues revealed that most of the xylem tracheid cells were blackened and bacteria were consistently associated with symptomatic plants. The bacterium most frequently recovered was identified as Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp. carotovorum (Pcc) using BioLog (TM) and sequencing of a specific similar to 510 bp IGS region. Pathogen-free plants obtained using meristem-tip micropropagation were inoculated with a wasabi isolate of Pcc. Vascular blackening symptoms developed in the rhizome after 8 weeks when the rhizome was first wounded by stabbing or cutting, or if the roots were pre-inoculated with Pythium species isolated from rhizome epidermal tissues, followed by inoculation with Pcc at 1 x 10(8) cells ml(-1). Xylem tracheid cells were blackened and Pcc was reisolated from all diseased tissues. The highest frequency of rhizome vascular blackening occurred at 22A degrees C and 27A degrees C and these tissues occasionally succumbed to soft rot at higher temperatures, but not when inoculated tissues were incubated at 10A degrees C. The rooting medium used by growers for vegetative propagation of wasabi was shown to contain Pcc but the pathogen was not recovered from the irrigation water. Entry of Pcc through wounds on wasabi rhizomes and the host tissue response result in symptoms of vascular blackening.
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