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A natural infection of Hebe is associated with an isolate of Candidatus
Phytoplasma asteris causing a yellowing and little leaf
disease in the UK
P. Jones1* and Y. Arocha2
1 Global Plant Clinic, Plant Pathogen Interactions
Division, Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Herts., AL5 2JQ, UK
2 CENSA, Apdo 10 San José de las Lajas, Havana, Cuba.
*phil.jones@bbsrc.ac.uk
Accepted for publication 18/04/06
Hebe (Veronica scutellata) is a herbaceous perennial
widely grown throughout the UK and elsewhere. In 2005 symptoms
of yellowing and little leaf were observed on a bush, that was
more than 20 years old, growing on the Rothamsted estate in
Hertfordshire. The symptoms, which were prevalent on shoots
produced by branches which had rooted from the main bush, had
shortened internodes, little leaves and yellowing of the foliage
(Fig. 1).

Figure 1: Hebe affected with yellowing and little leaf
Samples of apparently healthy shoots and those
affected by the little leaf symptoms were collected and the DNA
extracted. This was used as a template for nested PCR analysis
using primers P1/P7 and R16F2/R16R2 (Arocha et al.,
2005). Bands of expected size (1.25kb) were produced in all
samples with little leaf disease but none of the healthy ones.
These amplicons were sequenced by The Sequencing Service, School
of Life Sciences, University of Dundee, Scotland
(www.dnaseq.co.uk), using Applied Biosystems Big-Dye Ver 3.1
chemistry on an Applied Biosystems model 3730 automated
capillary DNA sequencer. The sequences were aligned, subject to
BLAST analysis and deposited in GenBank (Accession number
DQ387053). The highest similarity (99.7%) was with the barley
deformation phytoplasma (AY734453) from Lithuania; an isolate of
Candidatus Phytoplasma asteris (aster yellows) (IRPCM
Phytoplasma/Spiroplasma Working Team - Phytoplasma taxonomy
group, 2004). We believe this is both the first record of a
phytoplasma infecting hebe and the first definitive record of Candidatus
Phytoplasma asteris in the UK.
References
Arocha
Y, López M, Fernández M, Piñol B, Horta D, Peralta EL,
Almeida R, Carvajal O, Picornell S, Wilson MR, Jones P, 2005.Transmission
of a sugarcane yellow leaf phytoplasma by the delphacid
planthopper Saccharosydne saccharivora, a new vector of
sugarcane yellow leaf syndrome. Plant Pathology 54,
634-42
IRPCM Phytoplasma/Spiroplasma Working Team – Phytoplasma
Taxonomy Group, 2004. ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma’, a taxon for
the wall-less, non-helical prokaryotes that colonise plant
phloem and insects. International Journal of Systematic and
Evolutionary Microbiology 54, 1243-1255.
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