From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Pseudomonas cichorii
Species of bacterium
Species of bacterium
- Phytomonas cichorii Swingle 1925
- Bacterium cichorii (Swingle 1925) Elliott 1930
- Pseudomonas endiviae 1930
- Bacterium formosanum Okabe 1935
- Chlorobacter cichorii (Swingle 1925) Patel and Kulkarni 1951
- Pseudomonas papaveris Luketina and Young, 1978
Pseudomonas cichorii is a Gram-negative soil bacterium that is pathogenic to plants. It has a wide host range, and can have an important economical impact on lettuce, celery and chrysanthemum crops. P. cichorii was first isolated on endives (Cichorium endivia), from which it derives its name. It produces 6-aminopenicillanic acid. Based on 16S rRNA analysis, P. cichorii has been placed in the P. syringae group.
Hosts and symptoms
Pseudomonas cichorii is non-host specific as it does not infect just one host. Its host range includes lettuce, pepper, celery, coffee, wheat, basil and several other host plants. Symptoms of the causal agent vary depending on the host and the area of the plant infected. In general, Pseudomonas cichorii is seen to cause leaf blighting and spotting. The first appearance of symptoms involves a water soaked lesion that develops at the edge of the leaf, midvein or randomly across the leaf. These lesions progressively turn black or brown and may be surrounded by yellow halos. These lesions also often “coalesce and progress to severe leaf blight under favorable conditions for the bacterium.” When the infected leaves become dry, the spots often look brittle and crack.
Disease cycle
Generally, Pseudomonas cichorii can only survive for short periods in soil, but colonies have been isolated following six months of burial in plant debris and soil. For P. cichorii to divide and colonize after overwintering, conditions must be highly favorable. There must be an ideal temperature (20-28**°**C) and sufficient moisture. In addition to overwintering in plant debris and soil, P. cichorii can be transmitted via seeds. and can therefore survive on leaf surfaces until gaining entry into the host tissue. Entry into host tissue can be accomplished via wounds or natural openings such as stomata, epidermal hairs, or hydathodes. If conditions are favorable upon entry into the host tissue, P. cichorii can multiply rapidly. Large populations of Pseudomonas are known to release an array of phytotoxins, and this is the cause of the observed spotting symptoms on the leaf. After infection and asexual reproduction, P. cichorii can then spread to other leaves or plants. If the host plant dies or the leaf falls off, it may survive in this debris and repeat the disease cycle.
Environment
Pseudomonas cichorii grows in warm, wet and humid areas. It spreads by wind driven rain and survives and infects on wet leaf surfaces. The pathogen is often spread during sprinkler watering and overhead irrigation systems. Plants growing outside exposed to rain exhibit dark brown to black spots on their leaf surface. When the plants are exposed to a limited amount of water and moisture, they exhibit sunken in lesions on both the upper and lower leaf surface. These different spots and lesion types often aid in the identification of P. cichorii. Free moisture on the leaves are known to promote disease development and plant infection.
Pathogenesis
Little is known about the biochemical pathways of Pseudomonas cichorii, but linear lipoproteins are believed to contribute to virulence, motility, and biofilm formation. Additionally, hrp genes of Pseudomonas cichorii have been found to affect pathogenicity of an eggplant host, but not a lettuce host. These discoveries give an insight to potential phytotoxins and virulence factors, and also illustrate how large the knowledge gap is in our understanding of P. cichorii.
Management
To best prevent the spread of Pseudomonas cichorii the first intervention is to regulate the free water and watering system of leaves. Overhead sprinklers and hose watering should be replaced with soil irrigation. Soil irrigation is useful because it prevents excess water accumulation on plant surfaces by watering the plant from the root system. Soil irrigation also limits the ability of the seed structures to grow and infect leaf surfaces. A second intervention is watering earlier in the day. Watering earlier in the day gives the leaves more time during the day to dry. A third intervention, is to minimize leaf splashing. This lessens the chance that the infected water will spread to another host. Sanitation is also important. Workers and those handling the infected leaves should wash their hands and keep infected plant material from uninfected areas. These infected cuttings and seedlings should not be planted or kept near uninfected fields as the pathogen is able to survive on the host's seeds. The disease can be managed with copper or bactericidal products, but is not always successful in preventing disease spread when conditions are wet.
Importance
The value of U.S. lettuce production was around $1.9 billion in 2015, tomato production was valued at $821 million in 2018, and celery production was valued at $314 million in 2017. Pseudomonas cichorii can cause minimal to complete loss of crop yield in these species and many more. The wide range of hosts and presence on every continent besides Antarctica has contributed to its notoriety in many greenhouses and agricultural fields across the world. P. cichorii is present throughout the world, and historically has had significant impacts on a wide range of crops. Examples include the devastating varnish spot of lettuce in California, brown stem of celery in Florida, and the newly discovered leaf spot of tomato in New Zealand.
References
References
- [[Deane Bret Swingle. SWINGLE, Deane Bret]]: Center rot of "french endive" or wilt of chicory (''Cichorium intybos'' L.). Phytopathology, 1925, 15, 730
- {{ill. Carl Stapp. species
- Smith, Dunez, Lelliot, Phillips and Archer (1988) European Handbook of Plant Disease. Blackwell Scientific Publications.
- Huang HT, English AR, Production of 6-aminopenicillanic acid. US Patent 3,239,427 dated March 8, 1966.
- (1 July 2000). "Phylogenetic affiliation of the pseudomonads based on 16S rRNA sequence.". International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology.
- (12 September 2013). "A new genomovar of ''Pseudomonas cichorii'', a causal agent of tomato pith necrosis". European Journal of Plant Pathology.
- (9 October 2023). "Pseudomonas cichorii (bacterial blight of endive)". PlantwisePlus Knowledge Bank.
- (December 2015). "Plant Disease Advisory: Bacterial leaf blight caused by ''Pseudomonas cichorii''".
- (1982). "Infection source of the bacterial rot of lettuce caused by ''Pseudomonas cichorii''". Bulletin of the National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, C.
- (16 March 2020). "Pseudomonas cichorii (bacterial blight of endive)".
- (2018-03-06). "Chrysanthemum – Bacterial leaf spot (Pseudomonas cichorii)".
- (1982). "Relationship between the lesion development by Pseudomonas cichorii and growth stage and leaf position of lettuce and its infection mechanism". Bulletin of the National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, C.
- (June 1999). "Pseudomonas syringae Phytotoxins: Mode of Action, Regulation, and Biosynthesis by Peptide and Polyketide Synthetases". Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews.
- "UC IPM: Disease Control Outlines for Floriculture and Ornamental Nurseries: Geranium".
- "IPM: Reports on Plant Diseases: Bacterial Diseases of Geranium".
- (May 2013). "New Linear Lipopeptides Produced by ''Pseudomonas cichorii'' SF1-54 Are Involved in Virulence, Swarming Motility, and Biofilm Formation". Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions.
- (October 2008). "The ''hrp'' genes of ''Pseudomonas cichorii'' are essential for pathogenicity on eggplant but not on lettuce". Microbiology.
- "Chrysanthemum – Bacterial leaf spot (Pseudomonas cichorii)".
- "Chrysanthemum Diseases (Plant Diseases)".
- (December 2015). "Bacterial leaf blight caused by Pseudomonas cichorii".
- "Lettuce".
- "Tomatoes: fresh market production value 2019".
- "Celery".
- (November 1998). "First Report of Basil Leaf Spot Caused by Pseudomonas cichorii in Louisiana and Cultivar Screening Results". Plant Disease.
- (2010-11-25). "Epidemiology of Pseudomonas cichorii, the Cause of Lettuce Midrib Rot". Journal of Phytopathology.
- (June 2009). "Host range and genotypes reaction to Pseudomonas cichorii". Summa Phytopathologica.
- Osdaghi, E. (16 March 2020). "Pseudomonas cichorii (Bacterial blight of endive)".
- "Phytopathology 1977 {{!}} Varnish Spot, Destructive Disease of Lettuce in California Caused by Pseudomonas cichorii".
- Pernezny, Ken. (1994). "Brown Stem of Celery Caused by ''Pseudomonas cichorii''". Plant Disease.
- (1974-05-01). "Pseudomonas cichorii causing tomato and celery diseases in New Zealand". New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Pseudomonas cichorii — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report