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CBN-V Video Archives - S8-26
Methods for detecting the cassava bacterial blight pathogen: a
practical approach for managing the disease.
Valérie Verdier, Sandra Ojeda and Gloria Mosquera
Biotechnology Research Unit, Centro Internacional de Agricultura
Tropical (C.I.A.T.) and Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
(I.R.D.), A.A. 6713, Cali, Colombia.
Cassava bacterial blight (CBB), caused by Xanthomonas axonopodis
pv. manihotis (Xam), is a particularly destructive disease in
South America and Africa. The movement of infected asymptomatic
stems is a major means of pathogen dispersal as well as infected
seeds. The success of a cassava-seed certification program depends
on the availability of reliable tests to detect the pathogen in
vegetative planting materials and true seeds. We report here the
different methods that permitted to detect the pathogen in cassava
tissues. A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test was developed for
this pathogen. The PCR assay worked well for pathogen detection in
extracts from leaf and stem lesions and the minimum number of cells
that could be detected ranged from 3 x 102 to 104 CFU per ml.
Nested-PCR worked well for Xam detection from naturally
infected seeds. This technique was specific, sensitive, and rapid
for detecting Xam in cassava true seeds. The highest
detection level found was 1-2 viable cells per reaction. A dot-blot
assay was developed by evaluating a 898 bp DNA fragment unique to
Xam strains as a diagnostic DNA probe. The probe detected Xam
strains in crude extracts of leaf and stem lesions, cassava fruits
and sexual seeds that were naturally infected. Overall sensitivity
of the dot-blot method was about 103 CFU per reaction. The dot-blot
hybridization technique can be easily used for culture indexing.
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Donald Danforth Plant Science Center All rights reserved.
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