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Font, María Isabel


Publications
5

CitationNamesAbstract
Correction to: Haplotypes of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ identified in Umbeliferous crops in Spain Alfaro-Fernández et al. (2022). European Journal of Plant Pathology 164 (1) “Liberibacter solanacearum”
Correction to: Search for reservoirs of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ and mollicutes in weeds associated with carrot and celery crops Alfaro-Fernández et al. (2022). European Journal of Plant Pathology 163 (4) “Liberibacter solanacearum”
Haplotypes of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ identified in Umbeliferous crops in Spain Alfaro-Fernández et al. (2017). European Journal of Plant Pathology 149 (1) “Liberibacter solanacearum”
Search for reservoirs of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ and mollicutes in weeds associated with carrot and celery crops Alfaro-Fernández et al. (2017). European Journal of Plant Pathology 147 (1) “Liberibacter solanacearum”
Association of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ with a Vegetative Disorder of Celery in Spain and Development of a Real-Time PCR Method for Its Detection Teresani et al. (2014). Phytopathology® 104 (8) “Liberibacter solanacearum”
Text

Association of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ with a Vegetative Disorder of Celery in Spain and Development of a Real-Time PCR Method for Its Detection
A new symptomatology was observed in celery (Apium graveolens) in Villena, Spain in 2008. Symptomatology included an abnormal amount of shoots per plant and curled stems. These vegetative disorders were associated with ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ and not with phytoplasmas. Samples from plant sap were immobilized on membranes based on the spot procedure and tested using a newly developed real-time polymerase chain reaction assay to detect ‘Ca. L. solanacearum’. Then, a test kit was developed and validated by intralaboratory assays with an accuracy of 100%. Bacterial-like cells with typical morphology of ‘Ca. Liberibacter’ were observed using electron microscopy in celery plant tissues. A fifth haplotype of ‘Ca. L. solanacearum’, named E, was identified in celery and in carrot after analyzing partial sequences of 16S and 50S ribosomal RNA genes. From our results, celery (family Apiaceae) can be listed as a new natural host of this emerging bacterium.
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