Lz. Liang et al., VARIATION IN VIRULENCE, PLASMID CONTENT, AND GENES FOR CORONATINE SYNTHESIS BETWEEN PSEUDOMONAS-SYRINGAE PV MORSPRUNORUM AND P-S-SYRINGAE FROM PRUNUS, Plant disease, 78(4), 1994, pp. 389-392
Strains of Pseudomonas syringae pv. morsprunorum and P. s. syringae fr
om Prunus were examined for virulence to cherry, plasmid DNA content,
and coronatine synthesis genes. Michigan strains of P. s. syringae spr
ead faster through cherry rootstock plantlets than did strains of P. s
. morsprunorum. Twenty-six strains of P. s. morsprunorum, regardless o
f geographic origin, contained three to seven plasmids of variable siz
e. Twenty-two strains of P. s. syringae contained zero to two plasmids
. Among 319 field strains of P. s. morsprunorum from cherry (Prunus ce
rasus and Prunus avium) orchards in Michigan, 98% contained genomic DN
A that hybridized with two DNA probes for coronatine synthesis genes c
loned from P. s. tomato. Conversely, genomic DNA from strains of P. s.
syringae from cherry, except one strain, did not hybridize with eithe
r probe for coronatine synthesis genes. Southern analysis of plasmid D
NA indicated that the genes for coronatine synthesis were located on t
he same 105-kb plasmid in Michigan strains of P. s. morsprunorum as in
English strain PM567, which was used as a standard. In a bioassay for
coronatine, strains of P. s. morsprunorum with homologous DNA for cor
onatine synthesis, but not strains lacking homologous DNA, induced hyp
ertrophy on potato tuber slices. These differences in virulence, plasm
id profile, and coronatine production provide further evidence that P.
s. morsprunorum is distinct from stone fruit strains of P. s. syringa
e.