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'''Grapevine yellows''' (GY) are [[disease]]s associated to [[phytoplasma]]s that occur in many [[grape]] growing areas worldwide and are of still increasing significance. Phytoplasmas are obligate cell wall-less bacterial pathogens (class Mollicutes), and rely on plants and homopterous phloem-sucking insects for biological dispersal. In plants, they are mainly restricted to the phloem tissue where they can move and multiply through the sieve tube elements.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hogenhout |first1=Saskia A. |last2=Oshima |first2=Kenro |last3=Ammar |first3=El‐Desouky |last4=Kakizawa |first4=Shigeyuki |last5=Kingdom |first5=Heather N. |last6=Namba |first6=Shigetou |title=Phytoplasmas: bacteria that manipulate plants and insects |journal=Molecular Plant Pathology |date=2008 |volume=9 |issue=4 |pages=403–423 |doi=10.1111/j.1364-3703.2008.00472.x|pmid=18705857 |pmc=6640453 }}</ref> Almost identical symptoms of the GY syndrome are caused by different phytoplasmas and appear on leaves, shoots and clusters of grapevine. Typical symptoms include discoloration and necrosis of leaf veins and leaf blades, downward curling of leaves, lack or incomplete lignification of shoots, stunting and necrosis of shoots, abortion of inflorescences and shrivelling of berries. Those symptoms are related to callose deposition at the sieve plates and subsequent degeneration of the phloem. Although no resistant cultivars of ''[[Vitis vinifera]]'' or [[rootstock]]s are known so far, the various grape varieties differ considerably as far as symptom severity is concerned. It ranges from fast decline and death in highly susceptible cultivars to tolerant rootstocks as symptomless carriers of the pathogen. Currently, the only available control strategies include early eradication of infected crops, early eradication of infected source plants (weed control), and chemical control
'''Grapevine yellows''' (GY) are [[disease]]s associated to [[phytoplasma]]s that occur in many [[grape]] growing areas worldwide and are of still increasing significance. The most important grapevine yellows is [[flavescence dorée]].<ref name="BostanianVincentIsaacs2012">{{cite book | author1 = Noubar J. Bostanian | author2 = Charles Vincent | author3 = Rufus Isaacs | date = 26 June 2012 | title = Arthropod Management in Vineyards:: Pests, Approaches, and Future Directions | publisher = Springer Science & Business Media | pages = 258– | isbn = 9789400740327 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=i8cwQ-2W1zwC&pg=PA258}}</ref>
Phytoplasmas are obligate cell wall-less bacterial pathogens (class Mollicutes), and rely on plants and homopterous phloem-sucking insects for biological dispersal. In plants, they are mainly restricted to the phloem tissue where they can move and multiply through the sieve tube elements.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hogenhout |first1=Saskia A. |last2=Oshima |first2=Kenro |last3=Ammar |first3=El‐Desouky |last4=Kakizawa |first4=Shigeyuki |last5=Kingdom |first5=Heather N. |last6=Namba |first6=Shigetou |title=Phytoplasmas: bacteria that manipulate plants and insects |journal=Molecular Plant Pathology |date=2008 |volume=9 |issue=4 |pages=403–423 |doi=10.1111/j.1364-3703.2008.00472.x|pmid=18705857 |pmc=6640453 }}</ref> Almost identical symptoms of the GY syndrome are caused by different phytoplasmas and appear on leaves, shoots and clusters of grapevine. Typical symptoms include discoloration and necrosis of leaf veins and leaf blades, downward curling of leaves, lack or incomplete lignification of shoots, stunting and necrosis of shoots, abortion of inflorescences and shrivelling of berries. Those symptoms are related to callose deposition at the sieve plates and subsequent degeneration of the phloem. Although no resistant cultivars of ''[[Vitis vinifera]]'' or [[rootstock]]s are known so far, the various grape varieties differ considerably as far as symptom severity is concerned. It ranges from fast decline and death in highly susceptible cultivars to tolerant rootstocks as symptomless carriers of the pathogen. Currently, the only available control strategies include early eradication of infected crops, early eradication of infected source plants (weed control), and chemical control
of vectors through regular insecticide treatments.<ref>{{cite conference|last1=Maixner|first1=M.|title=Grapevine yellows - Current developments and unsolved questions |date=2006|conference=15th Meeting of the International Council for the Study of Virus and Virus-like Diseases of the Grapevine (ICVG)|location=Stellenbosch|publisher=South African Society for Enology and Viticulture|url=https://icvg.org/data/maixner.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161221222308/https://icvg.org/data/maixner.pdf|url-status=live|archive-date=December 21, 2016}}</ref>
of vectors through regular insecticide treatments.<ref>{{cite conference|last1=Maixner|first1=M.|title=Grapevine yellows - Current developments and unsolved questions |date=2006|conference=15th Meeting of the International Council for the Study of Virus and Virus-like Diseases of the Grapevine (ICVG)|location=Stellenbosch|publisher=South African Society for Enology and Viticulture|url=https://icvg.org/data/maixner.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161221222308/https://icvg.org/data/maixner.pdf|url-status=live|archive-date=December 21, 2016}}</ref>



Revision as of 11:15, 2 August 2022

Grapevine yellows
Grapevine yellow speckle viroid
Common namesGY
Causal agentsPhytoplasmas
HostsGrapes

Grapevine yellows (GY) are diseases associated to phytoplasmas that occur in many grape growing areas worldwide and are of still increasing significance. The most important grapevine yellows is flavescence dorée.[1]

Phytoplasmas are obligate cell wall-less bacterial pathogens (class Mollicutes), and rely on plants and homopterous phloem-sucking insects for biological dispersal. In plants, they are mainly restricted to the phloem tissue where they can move and multiply through the sieve tube elements.[2] Almost identical symptoms of the GY syndrome are caused by different phytoplasmas and appear on leaves, shoots and clusters of grapevine. Typical symptoms include discoloration and necrosis of leaf veins and leaf blades, downward curling of leaves, lack or incomplete lignification of shoots, stunting and necrosis of shoots, abortion of inflorescences and shrivelling of berries. Those symptoms are related to callose deposition at the sieve plates and subsequent degeneration of the phloem. Although no resistant cultivars of Vitis vinifera or rootstocks are known so far, the various grape varieties differ considerably as far as symptom severity is concerned. It ranges from fast decline and death in highly susceptible cultivars to tolerant rootstocks as symptomless carriers of the pathogen. Currently, the only available control strategies include early eradication of infected crops, early eradication of infected source plants (weed control), and chemical control of vectors through regular insecticide treatments.[3]

The main viticultural production areas in the Republic of North Macedonia were surveyed in 2006/2007/2008 for the presence of grapevine yellows. PCR and RFLP analyses were used to detect and identify phytoplasmas infecting grapevines. Only phytoplasmas associated with “bois noir” disease (ribosomal subgroup 16SrXII-A or stolbur) were detected. Molecular analyses showed that all phytoplasmas identified belonged to tuf-type II (VKII).[4]

References

  1. ^ Noubar J. Bostanian; Charles Vincent; Rufus Isaacs (26 June 2012). Arthropod Management in Vineyards:: Pests, Approaches, and Future Directions. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 258–. ISBN 9789400740327.
  2. ^ Hogenhout, Saskia A.; Oshima, Kenro; Ammar, El‐Desouky; Kakizawa, Shigeyuki; Kingdom, Heather N.; Namba, Shigetou (2008). "Phytoplasmas: bacteria that manipulate plants and insects". Molecular Plant Pathology. 9 (4): 403–423. doi:10.1111/j.1364-3703.2008.00472.x. PMC 6640453. PMID 18705857.
  3. ^ Maixner, M. (2006). Grapevine yellows - Current developments and unsolved questions (PDF). 15th Meeting of the International Council for the Study of Virus and Virus-like Diseases of the Grapevine (ICVG). Stellenbosch: South African Society for Enology and Viticulture. Archived (PDF) from the original on December 21, 2016.
  4. ^ Mitrev, Saša; Nakova, Emilija; Pejčinovski, Filip; Angelini, Elisa (2007). "Geographical distribution of 'bois noir' phytoplasmas infecting grapevines in the Republic of Macedonia" (PDF). Bulletin of Insectology. 60 (2): 155–156. ISSN 1721-8861.

External links