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    Acidovorax citrulli

    From Handwiki - Reading time: 2 min

    Short description: Species of bacterium

    Acidovorax citrulli
    Scientific classification edit
    Domain: Bacteria
    Phylum: Pseudomonadota
    Class: Betaproteobacteria
    Order: Burkholderiales
    Family: Comamonadaceae
    Genus: Acidovorax
    Species:
    A. citrulli
    Binomial name
    Acidovorax citrulli
    Willems et al. 1992
    Type strain
    NCPPB 1011

    ATCC 19860

    Strains
    • A. citrulli Strain. M1 (Group I)
    • A. citrulli Strain. M2 (Group I)
    • A. citrulli Strain. M6 (Group I)
    • A. citrulli Strain. W1 (Group II)
    • A. citrulli Strain. W2 (Group II)
    • A. citrulli Strain. 7a1 (Group II)
    • A. citrulli Strain. W4 (Group II)
    • A. citrulli Strain. W6 (Group II)
    Synonyms

    Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes subsp. konjaci
    Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes subsp. citrulli Acidovorax avenae subsp. citrulli

    Acidovorax citrulli (formerly A. avenae subsp. citrulli (Williems et al., 1992)) is a Gram-negative, biotrophic bacterium causes seedling blight and bacterial fruit blotch (BFB) of cucurbits.[1] On the basis of carbon source utilization, DNA-fingerprinting profiles, whole-cell fatty-acid composition utilization and pathogenicity assays, A. citrulli is divided into two distinct groups (Walcott et al., 2004; Burdman et al., 2005; Bahar & Burdman, 2010). The group I strains are mainly associated with non-watermelon plants (mainly melon), while group II includes strains that were mainly isolated from watermelon.[citation needed]

    BFB is a sporadic disease but under favorable environment, it becomes devastating and may cause 100% loss of marketable fruit.[2] The destructive potential of this disease was realized after massive outbreaks in commercial lots at various eastern states of the United States during the late 80s.[3][4] After the outbreak, this disease got much attention from the scientific community. Most efforts have been put on applied research, including improvement of diagnostics methods for A. citrulli detection in contaminated seeds, and screens for BFB resistance.[citation needed]

    References

    1. Schaad et al., 2008; Bahar et al., 2011
    2. Latin & Hopkins, 1995
    3. Latin & Rane, 1990
    4. Samodi, 1991

    External links

    Wikidata ☰ Q4674129 entry




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