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Authors Kolomiets

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Kolomiets, Michael V.


Publications
3

CitationNamesAbstract
Genome editing of NPR3 confers potato resistance to Candidatus Liberibacter spp Ramasamy et al. (2024). Plant Biotechnology Journal 22 (9) Liberibacter
Evaluation of the Effect of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter Solanacearum’ Haplotypes in Tobacco Infection Levy et al. (2023). Agronomy 13 (2) Liberibacter “Liberibacter solanacearum”
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Plant hairy roots enable high throughput identification of antimicrobials against Candidatus Liberibacter spp Irigoyen et al. (2020). Nature Communications 11 (1) Liberibacter
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Evaluation of the Effect of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter Solanacearum’ Haplotypes in Tobacco Infection
‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ (Lso) is a phloem-limited bacterial plant pathogen infecting solanaceous plants in the Americas and New Zealand and is associated with diseases of apiaceous crops in Europe, Northern Africa, and the Middle East. This pathogen is also related to other Liberibacter species that infect other crops. In the USA, two haplotypes of Lso, LsoA and LsoB, are predominant and responsible for diseases in potato and tomato. Tobacco, Nicotiana tabacum, a model species to study plant defenses, is a host for Lso; therefore, the interaction between Lso and this host plant could be used to study Liberibacter−plant interactions. In this study, we characterized the infection associated with LsoA and LsoB in tobacco. Under laboratory conditions, LsoB caused more severe symptoms than LsoA, and LsoA and LsoB titers were dynamic during the 7 weeks of the experiment. We also measured SA and other metabolites, including oxylipins, at an early point of infection and found that SA was accumulated in plants infected with LsoB but not with LsoA; whereas ABA levels were reduced in LsoA- but not in LsoB-infected plants.
Plant hairy roots enable high throughput identification of antimicrobials against Candidatus Liberibacter spp
AbstractA major bottleneck in identifying therapies to control citrus greening and other devastating plant diseases caused by fastidious pathogens is our inability to culture the pathogens in defined media or axenic cultures. As such, conventional approaches for antimicrobial evaluation (genetic or chemical) rely on time-consuming, low-throughput and inherently variable whole-plant assays. Here, we report that plant hairy roots support the growth of fastidious pathogens likeCandidatusLiberibacter spp., the presumptive causal agents of citrus greening, potato zebra chip and tomato vein greening diseases. Importantly, we leverage the microbial hairy roots for rapid, reproducible efficacy screening of multiple therapies. We identify six antimicrobial peptides, two plant immune regulators and eight chemicals which inhibitCandidatusLiberibacter spp. in plant tissues. The antimicrobials, either singly or in combination, can be used as near- and long-term therapies to control citrus greening, potato zebra chip and tomato vein greening diseases.
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