Abstract

Bradyrhizobium sp., a slow-growing nitrogen-fixing symbiotic bacterium of legumes and common root endophyte of other plants, is closely related to Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus (Las), the uncultured putative pathogen associated with citrus huanglongbing (HLB). In attempts to isolate Las on a low-nutrient medium that had been used for the isolation of several uncultured bacteria of the alpha subclass of proteobacteria, slow-growing Bradyrhizobium spp. were isolated and identified by sequencing of 16S rDNA. The individual isolates tested weakly positive (Ct = 31.2–36.0) with the USDA primers commonly used in qPCR assays for Las in foliar tissues. Direct DNA extracts from roots of HLB symptomatic trees that contained sequences of Bradyrhizobium sp. had Ct values ranging from 31.2 to 36.5; sequences of Las were not present in those samples. Potential cross-reaction between DNA of members of the Rhizobiales and sequences amplified by the Las primers were tested in silico with the Primer-BLAST tool in NCBI. Similar to Las, Bradyrhizobium generated predicted 16S rDNA amplicon sizes of 78–79 bp with the qPCR primers and of 1167-1172 bp with the conventional PCR primers. Bradyrhizobium sequences of 16S rDNA had 1–7 mismatches and only 1 mismatch at the 3′ end of qPCR and conventional PCR primers confirming potential cross-reactivity. As Bradyrhizobium is usually not found in foliage, the USDA qPCR primers can be safely used to check leaves for the presence of Las, but a threshold value of 31.0 is recommended for Las detection in roots. Other primers should be tested for potential cross-reaction with members of the Rhizobiales.

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