Abstract
Erwinia ananas, the causal agent of bacterial palea browning of rice, was transformed with bioluminescence genes to clarify their behavior on rice plants. Transformant CTB009T2 was used to inoculate rice plants, and the subsequent bioluminescence of CTB009T2 was observed using a two-dimensional luminometer. Luminous spots frequently appeared on anthers after flowering and on dead tissues such as leaf tips, lower leaf sheaths, and leaf blades. In spikelets that developed the disease symptom on the palea, luminous spots appeared 48 h after flowering on stigmas, basal parts of ovaries, and lodicules. These results indicate that postflowering anthers and dead tissues on rice plants are important sites for a rapid increase in the pathogen population, and that the multiplication of the pathogen on internal tissues of spikelets after flowering is associated with the appearance of browning.
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Hasegawa, M., Azegami, K., Yoshida, H. et al. Behavior of Erwinia ananas transformed with bioluminescence genes on rice plants. J Gen Plant Pathol 69, 267–270 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10327-003-0046-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10327-003-0046-y