Title of article :
Detection of Ralstonia solanacearum in Soil and Weeds from Commercial Tomato Fields Using Immunocapture and the Polymerase Chain Reaction
Author/Authors :
V. Dittapongpitch and S. Surat، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
detection assay for Ralstonia solanacearum in soil
and weeds was developed by combining immunocapture
and the polymerase chain reaction (IC-PCR).
Anti-R. solanacearum polyclonal antibodies were
produced in a white female rabbit and Dynal superparamagnetic
beads were coated with purified immunoglobulinG
(IgG). Using IC-PCR, the 718 bp target
DNA was amplified at a detection threshold of
approximately 104 colony-forming units (CFU) bacteria
per millilitre of suspension. DNA was not amplified
in soil suspensions derived from autoclaved and
non-autoclaved soils, which contained R. solanacearum
at 1–105 CFU/g soil. However, a positive PCR result
was obtained when bacteria in the soil suspensions
were first enriched in nutrient broth. IC-PCR detected
R. solanacearum in tomato stems 24 h after inoculation
by stem puncture with a suspension containing
approximately 105 CFU/ml. IC-PCR detected the bacterium
in 28 of 55 (51%) weeds and 10 of 32 (31%)
soil samples. Of the weeds, Physalis minima, Amaranthus
spinosus and Euphorbia hirta had the highest incidence
of infection. R. solanacearum was not detected
in soil taken from fallow fields, but it was discovered
in some weed species. Symptomless tomato and pepper
plants collected from the fields in which tomato bacterial
wilt had previously occurred were found to contain
R. solanacearum. These discoveries suggest that weeds
and latent hosts may play a role in the survival of
R. solanacearum between cropping cycles.
Keywords :
latent infection , Ralstonia solanacearum , weed hosts , tomato , Immunocapture-PCR
Journal title :
Journal of Phytopathology
Journal title :
Journal of Phytopathology