@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref22317,
author = {Annika Gillis and Margarita Rodriguez and Maria A. Santana},
title = {Serratia marcescens associated with bell pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) soft-rot disease under greenhouse conditions},
year = {2014},
keywords = {Bell pepper, emerging plant disease, Serratia marcescens, soft-rotting bacteria},
doi = {10.1007/s10658-013-0300-x},
url = {http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10658-013-0300-x},
pmid = {},
journal = {European Journal of Plant Pathology},
volume = {138},
number = {1},
pages = {1--8},
abstract = {Soft-rotting bacteria affecting bell peppers crops represent an economically destructive disease of growing importance worldwide. In Venezuela since 2006, soft-rot symptoms have been occasionally observed in bell pepper fruits grown under greenhouse conditions. Affected fruits presented water-soaked lesions that progressed upon completely fruit maceration. Bacteria were isolated from water-soaked lesions in order to identify the causal agent of this disease. Of 13 bacterial isolates recovered from affected fruits, only isolate AGPim1A was able to produce a hypersensitive reaction in tobacco plants and to reproduce soft-rot symptoms in bell peppers fruits. Several methods, including classical bacteriological tests and carbon utilization profiling, alongside with sequence analysis of 16S rRNA and housekeeping genes gyrB and groES-groEL, allowed identifying the soft-rotting bacterium as Serratia marcescens. To our knowledge, this is the first report showing a S. marcescens strain associated with soft-rot disease in bell pepper fruits. }
}
Citation for Study 14636
Citation title:
"Serratia marcescens associated with bell pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) soft-rot disease under greenhouse conditions".
Study name:
"Serratia marcescens associated with bell pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) soft-rot disease under greenhouse conditions".
This study is part of submission 14636
(Status: Published).
Citation
Gillis A., Rodriguez M., & Santana M.A. 2014. Serratia marcescens associated with bell pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) soft-rot disease under greenhouse conditions. European Journal of Plant Pathology, 138(1): 1-8.
Authors
-
Gillis A.
(submitter)
+32-10-478598
-
Rodriguez M.
-
Santana M.A.
Abstract
Soft-rotting bacteria affecting bell peppers crops represent an economically destructive disease of growing importance worldwide. In Venezuela since 2006, soft-rot symptoms have been occasionally observed in bell pepper fruits grown under greenhouse conditions. Affected fruits presented water-soaked lesions that progressed upon completely fruit maceration. Bacteria were isolated from water-soaked lesions in order to identify the causal agent of this disease. Of 13 bacterial isolates recovered from affected fruits, only isolate AGPim1A was able to produce a hypersensitive reaction in tobacco plants and to reproduce soft-rot symptoms in bell peppers fruits. Several methods, including classical bacteriological tests and carbon utilization profiling, alongside with sequence analysis of 16S rRNA and housekeeping genes gyrB and groES-groEL, allowed identifying the soft-rotting bacterium as Serratia marcescens. To our knowledge, this is the first report showing a S. marcescens strain associated with soft-rot disease in bell pepper fruits.
Keywords
Bell pepper, emerging plant disease, Serratia marcescens, soft-rotting bacteria
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S14636
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref22317,
author = {Annika Gillis and Margarita Rodriguez and Maria A. Santana},
title = {Serratia marcescens associated with bell pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) soft-rot disease under greenhouse conditions},
year = {2014},
keywords = {Bell pepper, emerging plant disease, Serratia marcescens, soft-rotting bacteria},
doi = {10.1007/s10658-013-0300-x},
url = {http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10658-013-0300-x},
pmid = {},
journal = {European Journal of Plant Pathology},
volume = {138},
number = {1},
pages = {1--8},
abstract = {Soft-rotting bacteria affecting bell peppers crops represent an economically destructive disease of growing importance worldwide. In Venezuela since 2006, soft-rot symptoms have been occasionally observed in bell pepper fruits grown under greenhouse conditions. Affected fruits presented water-soaked lesions that progressed upon completely fruit maceration. Bacteria were isolated from water-soaked lesions in order to identify the causal agent of this disease. Of 13 bacterial isolates recovered from affected fruits, only isolate AGPim1A was able to produce a hypersensitive reaction in tobacco plants and to reproduce soft-rot symptoms in bell peppers fruits. Several methods, including classical bacteriological tests and carbon utilization profiling, alongside with sequence analysis of 16S rRNA and housekeeping genes gyrB and groES-groEL, allowed identifying the soft-rotting bacterium as Serratia marcescens. To our knowledge, this is the first report showing a S. marcescens strain associated with soft-rot disease in bell pepper fruits. }
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 22317
AU - Gillis,Annika
AU - Rodriguez,Margarita
AU - Santana,Maria A.
T1 - Serratia marcescens associated with bell pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) soft-rot disease under greenhouse conditions
PY - 2014
KW - Bell pepper
KW - emerging plant disease
KW - Serratia marcescens
KW - soft-rotting bacteria
UR - http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10658-013-0300-x
N2 - Soft-rotting bacteria affecting bell peppers crops represent an economically destructive disease of growing importance worldwide. In Venezuela since 2006, soft-rot symptoms have been occasionally observed in bell pepper fruits grown under greenhouse conditions. Affected fruits presented water-soaked lesions that progressed upon completely fruit maceration. Bacteria were isolated from water-soaked lesions in order to identify the causal agent of this disease. Of 13 bacterial isolates recovered from affected fruits, only isolate AGPim1A was able to produce a hypersensitive reaction in tobacco plants and to reproduce soft-rot symptoms in bell peppers fruits. Several methods, including classical bacteriological tests and carbon utilization profiling, alongside with sequence analysis of 16S rRNA and housekeeping genes gyrB and groES-groEL, allowed identifying the soft-rotting bacterium as Serratia marcescens. To our knowledge, this is the first report showing a S. marcescens strain associated with soft-rot disease in bell pepper fruits.
L3 - 10.1007/s10658-013-0300-x
JF - European Journal of Plant Pathology
VL - 138
IS - 1
SP - 1
EP - 8
ER -