Abstract

The present work aimed to investigate the aetiology of a disease affecting tomato in Oltrepo pavese (Lombardy, North Italy). During field surveys carried out in a tomato plantation in August 2015, symptoms typically associated with phytoplasma infection (leaf purpling, witches’-broom, flower and fruit alterations, and stunting) were observed on tomato plants. Based on 16S rRNA gene amplification and nucleotide sequence analyses, ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma solani’ was detected in 82% of symptomatic tomato plants and in bindweed plants. Molecular characterization based on tufB and stamp gene nucleotide sequence analyses revealed the presence of two 'Ca. P. solani' strain types: the type tufB-b/St5, identified respectively in 83% and 100% of tomato and bindweed infected plants, and the type tufB-a/St18 identified in 17% of tomato infected plants. These results suggest that ‘Ca. P. solani’ ecology in the examined agro-ecosystem is associated mainly with the bindweed-related host system. Based on such evidences, it should be interesting to evaluate the incidence dynamics of the disease and to investigate its epidemiology by tracing the movements of ‘Ca. P. solani’ throughout neighbouring fields.

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