Type
article
Publisher
Identifier
MENDES, R.J. [et al.] (2022) - Variability within a clonal population of Erwinia amylovora disclosed by phenotypic analysis. PeerJ. 10:e13695. DOI https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.13695
10.7717/peerj.13695
Title
Variability within a clonal population of Erwinia amylovora disclosed by phenotypic analysis
Relation
FCT - UIDB/50006/2020 — UIDP/50006/2020
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/POR_NORTE/SFRH%2FBD%2F133519%2F2017/PT
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/POR_NORTE/SFRH%2FBD%2F133519%2F2017/PT
Date
2023-03-28T15:13:14Z
2023-03-28T15:13:14Z
2022
2023-03-28T15:13:14Z
2022
Description
Background
Fire blight is a destructive disease of pome trees, caused by Erwinia amylovora, leading to high losses of chain-of-values fruits. Major outbreaks were registered between 2010 and 2017 in Portugal, and the first molecular epidemiological characterization of those isolates disclosed a clonal population with different levels of virulence and susceptibility to antimicrobial peptides.
Methods
This work aimed to further disclose the genetic characterization and unveil the phenotypic diversity of this E. amylovora population, resorting to MLSA, growth kinetics, biochemical characterization, and antibiotic susceptibility.
Results
While MLSA further confirmed the genetic clonality of those isolates, several phenotypic differences were recorded regarding their growth, carbon sources preferences, and chemical susceptibility to several antibiotics, disclosing a heterogeneous population. Principal component analysis regarding the phenotypic traits allows to separate the strains Ea 630 and Ea 680 from the remaining.
Discussion
Regardless the genetic clonality of these E. amylovora strains isolated from fire blight outbreaks, the phenotypic characterization evidenced a population diversity beyond the genotype clonality inferred by MLSA and CRISPR, suggesting that distinct sources or environmental adaptations of this pathogen may have occurred.
Conclusion
Attending the characteristic clonality of E. amylovora species, the data gathered here emphasizes the importance of phenotypic assessment of E. amylovora isolates to better understand their epidemiological behavior, namely by improving source tracking, make risk assessment analysis, and determine strain-specific environmental adaptations, that might ultimately lead to prevent new outbreaks.
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Access restrictions
openAccess
Language
eng
Comments