Xylem morphology influences lemon susceptibility to mal secco disease
C. Catalano, M. Di Guardo, M. Cortese, M. Caruso, S. La Malfa, G. Distefano, A. Gentile

TL;DR
This study shows that lemon plants with denser xylem vessels are more susceptible to mal secco disease, a serious citrus infection.
Contribution
The study reveals a new link between xylem vessel density and mal secco disease susceptibility in citrus plants.
Findings
Xylem vessel density positively correlates with mal secco disease susceptibility in citrus genotypes.
Constitutive xylem morphology may influence host tolerance to vascular infections.
Further research is needed to uncover additional histological and biochemical mechanisms of tolerance.
Abstract
In plants, xylem is directly involved in conveyance of water and dissolved minerals, mechanical support of the plant, and tolerance to drought stress. Moreover, for several fruit crops affected by vascular diseases, an association between the morphology of xylem vessels and susceptibility was described. In fact, compartmentalization represents a key determinant mechanism of plant resistance to vascular infections. Mal secco is a severe tracheomycosis affecting many citrus species of relevant economic importance. Currently, both chemical and agronomic measures are not sufficient to contain the diffusion of the pathogen raising the interest for the elucidation of the host tolerance mechanism against mal secco.This study investigated the constitutive morphology of xylem tissue, in terms of vessel diameter and vessel density in 28 citrus genotypes, all characterized by a different degree of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases · Phytoplasmas and Hemiptera pathogens · Leaf Properties and Growth Measurement
