Wei Wei, Trivellone Valeria, Dietrich Christopher H, Zhao Yan, Bottner-Parker Kristi D, Ivanauskas Algirdas
Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, Molecular Plant Pathology Laboratory, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Beltsville, MD 20705, USA.
Illinois Natural History Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois, Champaign, IL 61820, USA.
Pathogens. 2021 Mar 16;10(3):352. doi: 10.3390/pathogens10030352.
Phytoplasmas are obligate transkingdom bacterial parasites that infect a variety of plant species and replicate in phloem-feeding insects in the order Hemiptera, mainly leafhoppers (Cicadellidae). The insect capacity in acquisition, transmission, survival, and host range directly determines the epidemiology of phytoplasmas. However, due to the difficulty of insect sampling and the lack of follow-up transmission trials, the confirmed phytoplasma insect hosts are still limited compared with the identified plant hosts. Recently, quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR)-based quick screening of 227 leafhoppers collected in natural habitats unveiled the presence of previously unknown phytoplasmas in six samples. In the present study, 76 leafhoppers, including the six prescreened positive samples, were further examined to identify and characterize the phytoplasma strains by semi-nested PCR. A total of ten phytoplasma strains were identified in leafhoppers from four countries including South Africa, Kyrgyzstan, Australia, and China. Based on virtual restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis, these ten phytoplasma strains were classified into four distinct ribosomal (16Sr) groups (16SrI, 16SrIII, 16SrXIV, and 16SrXV), representing five new subgroups (16SrI-AO, 16SrXIV-D, 16SrXIV-E, 16SrXIV-F, and 16SrXV-C). The results strongly suggest that the newly identified phytoplasma strains not only represent new genetic subgroup lineages, but also extend previously undiscovered geographical distributions. In addition, ten phytoplasma-harboring leafhoppers belonged to seven known leafhopper species, none of which were previously reported insect vectors of phytoplasmas. The findings from this study provide fresh insight into genetic diversity, geographical distribution, and insect host range of phytoplasmas. Further transmission trials and screening of new potential host plants and weed reservoirs in areas adjacent to collection sites of phytoplasma harboring leafhoppers will contribute to a better understanding of phytoplasma transmission and epidemiology.
植原体是专性跨界细菌寄生虫,可感染多种植物物种,并在半翅目取食韧皮部的昆虫(主要是叶蝉,叶蝉科)体内繁殖。昆虫在获取、传播、存活以及宿主范围方面的能力直接决定了植原体的流行病学特征。然而,由于昆虫采样困难以及缺乏后续传播试验,与已鉴定的植物宿主相比,已确认的植原体昆虫宿主仍然有限。最近,基于定量聚合酶链反应(qPCR)对在自然栖息地采集的227只叶蝉进行快速筛选,发现6个样本中存在以前未知的植原体。在本研究中,对包括6个预筛选阳性样本在内的76只叶蝉进行了进一步检测,通过半巢式PCR鉴定并表征植原体菌株。在来自南非、吉尔吉斯斯坦、澳大利亚和中国这四个国家的叶蝉中总共鉴定出10种植原体菌株。基于虚拟限制性片段长度多态性(RFLP)分析,这10种植原体菌株被分为四个不同的核糖体(16Sr)组(16SrI、16SrIII、16SrXIV和16SrXV),代表五个新的亚组(16SrI - AO、16SrXIV - D、16SrXIV - E、16SrXIV - F和16SrXV - C)。结果有力地表明,新鉴定的植原体菌株不仅代表了新的遗传亚组谱系,而且扩展了以前未发现的地理分布。此外,10只携带植原体的叶蝉属于7种已知叶蝉物种,其中没有一种是以前报道的植原体昆虫传播媒介。本研究的结果为植原体的遗传多样性、地理分布和昆虫宿主范围提供了新的见解。在携带植原体的叶蝉采集地点附近地区进一步进行传播试验以及筛选新的潜在宿主植物和杂草宿主,将有助于更好地了解植原体的传播和流行病学特征。