Abstract

Cundinamarca is the major potato producer region in Colombia. Potato growers first reported the presence of new symptoms affecting commercial potato fields in Cundinamarca as far back as 2012. These included foliage yellowing, curling on the upper leaf side and purple margins, occasionally with purple coloration of the underside veins, excessive shoot proliferation, abnormally short or long internodes and abnormal leaf development. Plants had a distorted pattern of growth suggesting a possible phytoplasma cause. Phytoplasmas were detected by nested PCR of the phytoplasma 16S rRNA gene and we confirmed the presence of ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma asteris’ (group 16SrI) and ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma fraxini’ (16SrVII) by RFLP and sequencing of samples from commercial plots. Of 152 symptomatic and non-symptomatic potato plants tested, 33.5% were positive for one of the identified phytoplasmas or both (mixed infections). Phytoplasmas were also observed by electron microscopy in symptomatic plants. Both phytoplasmas were transmitted in tubers produced by infected plants and by the insect vector Exitianus atratus (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) to healthy test potato plants. Daughter plants from infected tubers and the healthy plants inoculated via the insect vector developed the same symptoms observed in field grown potato plants, in single and mixed infections of both phytoplasmas. Our results confirm the presence of a new disease of potato in Cundinamarca, Colombia, which we named yellowing and rolling-leaf phytoplasma (fitoplasma del amarillamiento y enrrollamiento de hojas).

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