1. Identifying resistance in wild and ornamental cherry towards bacterial canker caused by Pseudomonas syringae
- Author
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Andrea Vadillo Dieguez, Dawn L. Arnold, Michelle T. Hulin, Richard J. Harrison, John W. Mansfield, Helen C. Neale, Francesca Cossu, Samantha Lynn, Karen Russell, and Robert W. Jackson
- Subjects
Bacterial canker ,disease resistance ,Resistance (ecology) ,Pseudomonas syringae, tree disease, disease resistance ,Pseudomonas syringae ,Plant Science ,Horticulture ,Biology ,tree disease ,Microbiology ,Ornamental plant ,Genetics ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Bacterial canker is a major disease of stone fruits and is a critical limiting factor to sweet cherry ( ) production worldwide. One important strategy for disease control is the development of resistant varieties. Partial varietal resistance in sweet cherry is discernible using shoot or whole tree inoculations; however, these quantitative differences in resistance are not evident in detached leaf assays. To identify novel sources of resistance to canker, we used a rapid leaf pathogenicity test to screen a range of wild cherry, ornamental species and sweet cherry × ornamental cherry hybrids with the canker pathogens, pvs , races 1 and 2, and . Several accessions exhibited limited symptom development following inoculation with each of the pathogens, and this resistance extended to 16 . strains pathogenic on sweet cherry and plum. Resistance was associated with reduced bacterial multiplication after inoculation, a phenotype similar to that of commercial sweet cherry towards nonhost strains of . . Progeny resulting from a cross of a resistant ornamental species with susceptible sweet cherry ( . ) exhibited resistance indicating it is an inherited trait. Identification of accessions with resistance to the major bacterial canker pathogens is the first step towards characterizing the underlying genetic mechanisms of resistance and introducing these traits into commercial germplasm. [Abstract copyright: © 2021 The Authors. Plant Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Society for Plant Pathology.]
- Published
- 2022