Ks. Gibb et al., STUDIES ON SWEET-POTATO LITTLE-LEAF PHYTOPLASMA DETECTED IN SWEET-POTATO AND OTHER PLANT-SPECIES GROWING IN NORTHERN AUSTRALIA, Phytopathology, 85(2), 1995, pp. 169-174
Symptoms of vein clearing, small leaves (''little leaf''), stunting of
plants, proliferation of shoots, and small tuberous roots were observ
ed in sweet potato growing in the Darwin region of the Northern Territ
ory, Australia (12 30' S latitude) in December 1990. This was the firs
t report of such symptoms in sweet potato but there was anecdotal evid
ence of similar symptoms in other crop, ornamental, and weed host spec
ies growing in this region. Plant pathogenic mycoplasmalike organisms,
or phytoplasmas, were observed in sieve tube elements of diseased swe
et potato using fluorescent and electron microscopy. To screen a range
of local plant host species for phytoplasmas, a region of the 16S rRN
A phytoplasma gene was amplified in the polymerase chain reaction (PCR
). The relatedness of phytoplasmas detected in different host species
was determined by amplifying a larger 16S rRNA fragment and subjecting
it to restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis using
four restriction enzymes. No differences were detected between phytopl
asmas associated with the local plant host species, and the RFLP patte
rn of the phytoplasmas from this region appeared to be different from
those published for other phytoplasmas. This suggests that the phytopl
asmas from this region of northern Australia compose a new subgroup. P
hytoplasma chromosomal DNA was extracted from diseased sweet potato, a
nd the chromosome was linearized by gamma-irradiation prior to separat
ion by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. The size of the full-length s
weet potato little-leaf phytoplasma chromosome was 600 kb, which is on
e of the smallest phytoplasma genome sizes reported so far.