Title: 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm Mondays except
1Citrus Pathology PLP 5115C - Fall 2008
- 400 pm to 700 pm Mondays except
- Sept 1
2Course Schedule - Fall 2008
- Aug. 25 Concepts of Plant Pathology -
terminology, the infection process, plant
pathogen dispersal, relationship to environment,
ecological considerations, Brlansky - Sept. 1 Labor Day - Holiday
- Sept 8 Characteristics of Fungal Pathogens -
classes of fungi, reproduction and spore types,
life cycles, dispersal, Chung - Sept. 15 Fungal Diseases of Fruit and Foliage -
greasy spot, melanose, scab, Alternaria Dewdney
3- Bacterial and Bacterial-like Pathogens -
morphology, physiology, multiplication,
dispersal citrus canker, bacterial spot, CVC,
greening organisms.Wang - Sept. 29 Phytophthora Root Diseases of Citrus.
Graham - Oct. 6 Control of Fungal and Bacterial Pathogens
- nature and development of resistance in plants,
cultural practices and environmental factors in
relationship to control, characteristics range of
activity and mechanisms of action of fungicides
and bactericides. Dewdney
4- Oct. 13 Postharvest Decays. Zhang
- Â MID TERM EXAM
- Â Oct. 20 Characteristics of Viral and Viroid
Pathogens - virus structure, replication, and
infection process nature and characteristics of
viroids. Dawson - Oct. 27. Diseases Caused by Systemic Procaryotic
Organisms - greening, stubborn, CVC. Davis - Nov. 3 Citrus Tristeza Virus and Other Citrus
Viruses. Dawson - Nov. 10 Viroids - exocortis, cachexia, and
others. Brlansky
5- Nov. 17. Field Trip - blight, tristeza, foot
rot, diseases of fruit and foliage. Brlansky,
Wang, Graham - Nov. 24 Tree Declines - blight, Rio Grande
gummosis, tangerine collapse , etc. - Control of Viruses, Viroids, and Systemic
Procaryotic Pathogens - varietal resistance,
relationship to vectors, cross protection.
Brlansky - Dec. 1 Epidemiology of Citrus Diseases. Graham
- Dec. 8. Genetic Manipulation for Disease
Resistance. Gmitter - Dec. 15. FINAL EXAMINATION
- Â
6Reading Materials
- Nothing assigned
- Some handouts from lecturers
- Compendium of Citrus Diseases
- Google specific disease for more information
7Concepts of Plant Pathology
- What is plant pathology?
- Plants- a living thing that can not move
voluntarily, has no sense organs and synthesizes
food from carbon dioxide. - Pathology the study of the nature of disease or
any abnormal variation from a sound condition - Plant Pathology is 1. the study of living
entities and the environmental conditions that
cause disease in plants - 2. the mechanisms by which these factors produce
disease in plants , 3. the interactions between
disease-causing agents and the diseased plant,
and 4. the methods of preventing or controlling
disease and alleviating the damage it causes
8What do Plant Pathologist Study?
- Diseases caused by fungi, bacteria, mycoplasmas,
parasitic higher plants, viruses, viroids,
nematodes and protozoa - Also plant disorders caused by excess, imbalance,
or lack of physical or chemical factors (e.g.
moisture, temperature and nutrients) - But not plant damage caused by insects, humans or
animals
9Plant Pathology uses basic knowledge of
- Botany, mycology, bacteriology, virology,
nematology, plant anatomy, plant physiology,
genetics, molecular biology, genetic engineering,
biochemistry, horticulture, tissue culture, soil
science, forestry, chemistry, physics,
meteorology, and other branches of science. - Uses advances other sciences to solve plant
pathological problems. - Plant pathology attempts to increase our
knowledge of the causes and development of plant
diseases - Practical goal is to save produce that is
destroyed by plant diseases to make it available
to feed and cloth the world.
10Concept of Disease in Plants
- What is a healthy plant?
- When it can carry out its physiological functions
to the best of its genetic potential - Functions include what?
- normal cell division, differentiation,
development absorption of water and minerals
from the soil and translocation throughout the
plant photosynthesis and translocation of the
products to areas of utilization or storage
metabolism of synthesized compounds
reproduction and storage of food supplies for
overwintering or reproduction.
11- Disease whenever plants are disturbed by
pathogens or by certain environmental conditions
and one or more functions are interfered with
beyond a certain deviation from the normal - The primary cause of disease are either
pathogenic living organisms (pathogens) or
factors in the environment. - Symptoms? Evidence of the reaction of the plant
to the pathogen or materials that the pathogen
produces. Macroscopically or microscopically?
12Types of Function Interference
- Root rots root infection
- Vascular wilts and cankers interference with
the vascular system - Leaf spots, blights and mosaics infection of
foliage - Viral and phytoplasma infections interfers with
downward translocation of photosynthetic products - Bacterial and fungal blights interfers with
flowers - Fruit rots causes reduce reproduction or
storage of reserve foods for the new plant
13- Hyperplasia or hypertrophy more cells produced
or larger cells produced resulting in
nonfunctioning or abnormal cells or abnomal cell
growth often diverting food materials from the
rest of the plant - In all cases the physiology of the plant is
affected - Now define disease
- The malfunctioning of host cells and tissues that
results from their continuous irritation by a
pathogenic agent or environmental factor and
leads to the development of symptoms
14- Is disease a condition?
- Yes, a condition involving abnormal changes in
the form, physiology, integrity, or behavior of
the plant that may result in the impairment or
death of the plant or its parts. - How do pathogens cause disease in plants?
- 1. weaken the plant by absorbing food from the
plant, 2. killing or disturbing the metabolism of
the cells via toxins, enzymes or growth
regulating substances, 3. blocking the
transportation of food, minerals, and water, 4.
consuming the contents of the host cells
15Classification of Plant Diseases
- I. Infectious or biotic plant diseases (type of
pathogen) - Caused by 1. fungi, 2. prokaryotes (bacteria or
phytoplasmas), 3. parasitic higher plants, 4.
viruses and viroids, 5. nematodes - II. Disease symptom root rot, canker, mosaic,
foliage, leaf spot, wilt, fruit disease, post
harvest, etc. - III. Field crop disease, fruit tree disease,
forest disease, turf disease, ornamental disease,
etc. - Question to class Which is the most useful?
16History of Plant Diseases
- Old Testament lists blasting and mildews
- Theophratus (370- 286 B.C.) first to study and
write about diseases of trees, cereals and
legumes. - Romans rust god, Rubigo to protect them from
cereal rusts - 1792 Micheli role of fungi (dust particles
taken from a fungus reproduced the same kind of
fungus - 1755 Tillet black dust from bunted wheat to
seed of healthy wheat and produced bunt in the
plants. - 1807 Prevost bunt disease caused by a fungus
17- Debary 1853 smut and rust fungi are the causes
not the results of plant diseases. Remember he
was a microscopist - Brefield 1875, 1883, 1912 introduced techniques
for growing microorganisms in pure cultures.
Assisted by the accomplishments of Koch, Petri
and others - 1878 Downy mildew of grape was introduced into
Europe form the U.S. Spread rapidly. Millardet
noticed that vines sprayed with copper sulfate
and lime to deter pilferers retained their leaves
during the season. Bordeaux mixture - 1882 Ward coffee rust in Ceylon warned against
monoculture of crops
18Bacteria in Plant Disease
- 1876 Pasteur and Koch proved anthrax was incited
by a bacterium - E. F. Smith 1895 bacterial diseases of plants
bacterial wilts of cucurbits, ornamentals,
crucifers. Established bacteria as
phytopathogens - 1977 Chilton Crown gall bacterium transforms
normal plant cells into tumor cells (anyone know
the causal agent?) - 1972 Windsor and Black Rickettsialike organisms
in the phloem of clover with clover club leaf. - 1973 and after Fastidious bacteria in the xylem
of Pierces disease of grapes, phony peach, and
others (who cultured it?)
19Nematodes in Plant Disease
- 1743 Needham within wheat galls
- 1913-1932 Cobb series of studies on plant
parasitic nematodes
20Viruses in Plant Diseases
- 1886 Mayer tobacco mosaic juice from plants
was infectious. contagium fluidium - 1929 Holmes local lesions could be used to
measure the number of virus present in plant sap
prep. - 1935 Stanley precipated the crystalline protein
from infected tobacco plants and showed that the
virus was an autocatalytic protein that could
multiply in living cells (Nobel Prize) - Bawden in 1936 virus was protein and RNA
- 1939 virus particles first seen with the electron
microscope - 1956 Gierer and Schramm protein could be
removed from the virus and that the nucleic acid
carried the genetic info
21- 1962 Agar double diffusion serological test for
viruses - 1977 ELISA test for viruses
- 1975 monoclonal antibodies
- Nucleic acid studies 1936 to 1977
- 1971 Diener determined that potato spindle tuber
disease was caused by a viroid (What is a viroid?
Is it unique to plants?) - 1980 Cauliflower mosaic virus, a circular double
stranded DNA, was first sequenced (8,000 base
pairs) - 1982 complete sequence of single stranded TMV
was done
22Protozoa and Phytoplasmas
- 1909 Lafont observed flagellate protozoa in latex
bearing cells of laticiferous plants of
Euphorbiaceae - 1931 Stahel found flagellates infecting phloem
of coffee - 1963 Vermeulen showed evidence of flagellates in
coffee and in 1976 they were associated with
coconut and oil palms - 1967 Doi in Japan observed mycoplasmalike bodies
in the phloem of plants infected with leafhopper
diseases - 1967 Ishiie and showed that symptoms disappeared
temporarily if treated with tetracycline
antibiotics - 1971 Davis et al observed spiroplasmas in corn
stunt disease
23Diagnosis of Plant Diseases
- Pathogen or Environment Look for sign of the
pathogen or symptom ( already described) which
might infer pathogen - Infectious diseases diseases caused by
pathogens - Characterized by their presence on or inside the
plants - Parasitic higher plants dodder, mistletoe,
witchweed or broomrape growing on the surface - Nematodes presence on or in a plant or in its
rhizosphere, but must be distinguished from
nonparasitic ones taxonomic - Fungi must determine if it is a parasite or
saprophyte morphology of its structures
taxonomy and reports of pathogenicity on plant
species
24- Bacteria diagnosis of the disease and the ID of
the bacterium in based primarily on symptoms,
constant presence of the bacterium and absence of
other pathogens culturing, selective media and
taxonomic characterization serology, PCR, fatty
acid analysis avoidance of looking at secondary
organisms fastidious bacteria difficult (small
and sometimes in low numbers) and are difficult
to culture. - Phytoplasmas and spiroplasmas usually cause
stunting and yellowing of plants and other
specific symptoms electron microscopy is used
Ps not culturable, Ss are often graft
transmissible and sensitive to antibiotics,
insect vectored
25- Viruses and viroids distinctive symptoms on
hosts and often identified this way virus
transmission tests to specific hosts by sap
transmission or grafting transmission by certain
insects serological test available for many,
PCR, electron microscopy, light microscopy of
viral inclusions electrophoretic and PCR tests
for viroids - Noninfectious diseases lack or over abundance
of substances, environmental factors
26Kochs Rules
- Pathogen found associated with the disease in all
diseased plants - Pathogen must be isolated and grown in pure
culture on nutrient media and its characteristics
described or on a susceptible host plant
(obligate parasites) and it appearance and
effects recorded - Pathogen from pure culture must be inoculated to
healthy plants and must produce the same disease
symptoms - The pathogen must be reisolated from the disease
plant and it characteristics must be the same as
in step 2.
27- What about viruses and viroids?
- What about circumstantial evidence?
28Break
29Parasitism and Disease Development
- Infectious diseases result from infection of a
plant by a pathogen - Parasite an organism that lives on or in some
other organism and obtains its food from the
later - Parasitism relationship between a parasite and
its host - Is a plant parasite a pathogen?
- Symbiosis mutual benefit to parasite and host
- Pathogenicity the ability of the parasite to
interfer with one or more essential functions of
the plant with parasitism playing an important
but not always the most impt role.
30- Obligate parasites
- Nonobligate parasites
- Faculative saprophytes
- Faculative parasites
- Parasitism is common of cultivated crops
- In N. America 8000 species of fungi cause
80,000 diseases, 200 species of bacteria and 75
phytoplasmas, more than 500 viruses attack crops.
31Development of Disease
- What is necessary for a plant disease to occur?
- Plant Pathogen
- Susceptible plant
- Environment for disease to develop or express
itself - Called the Disease Triangle
- Variability of each component can change the
degree of disease severity - Could there be an additional component of the
triangle? - What about insect vectors?
32Stages in Development of DiseaseThe Disease
Cycle
- Infectious diseases have more or less distinct
events in the succession that lead to the
development and perpetuation of the disease and
the pathogen - Chain of events is the disease cycle
- May correspond to the pathogen life cycle but not
always - Disease cycle involves changes in the plant and
the symptoms of the plant as well as in the
pathogen and spans time within the growing season
and from one season to the next - Eight events in the disease cycle
33The Disease Cycle
- Inoculation
- Penetration
- Establishment of infection
- Colonization
- Growth and reproduction of the pathogen
- Dissemination of the pathogen
- Survival of the pathogen in absence of the host
(overwintering or oversummering)
34Inoculation
- Pathogen contact with the host- inoculum
- Spores, sclerotia, fragments of mycelium,
individuals of bacteria, phytoplasmas, viruses,
viroids, etc. - Propagules single units of inoculum of a
pathogen - Types of inoculum primary,secondary
- Sources of inoculum debris, soil, tubers,
transplants, seed - Landing or arrival of inoculum wind, water,
insects
35Prepenetration Phenomena
- Germination of spores or seeds
- Hatching of nematode eggs
- Attachment of pathogen to the host plant
- Recognition between host and pathogen
36Penetration
- Direct penetration through intact plant surfaces
- Through wounds
- Natural openings
37Infection
- Process by which pathogens establish contact with
susceptible cells or tissues and procure
nutrition from them. - Successful infections result in symptoms in or on
the host - Latent infections do not produce symptoms
immediately - Incubation period is the time between inoculation
and appearance of disease symptoms - Invasion movement throughout the host
38Colonization
- Growth and reproduction of the pathogen
39Dissemination
- Further growth sometimes outside the host to new
tissues or new plants - By Air
- By Water
- By insects, mites, nematodes and other vectors
- Humans
40Overwintering or Oversummering
- Survival in plant tissues or plant propagative
parts - In infected plant debris
- Soil
- Seeds (parasitic higher plants)
41Disease Cycles
- Monocyclic single cycle pathogens such as
smuts, - Polycyclic more than one generation per growth
season multi cycle pathogens such as downy
mildews, late blight of potato - Polycyclic diseases usually cause explosive
epidemics since they complete many disease cycles
per year and the amount of inoculum is multipled
many fold - Poletic pathogens multi-year pathogens survive
in perennial hosts and have as much inoculum at
the beginning of the season as the ended with in
the last season. Examples are viruses and
phytoplasmas and fungal vascular wilts
42Terminology
- List of terms to study
- Will provide a list of terms and definitions that
will be helpful in the coming lectures