Screening potential insect vectors in a museum biorepository reveals
undiscovered diversity of plant pathogens in natural areas
Abstract
Phytoplasmas (Mollicutes, Acholeplasmataceae), vector-borne obligate
bacterial plant-parasites, infect nearly 1,000 plant species and unknown
numbers of insects, mainly leafhoppers (Hemiptera, Deltocephalinae),
which play a key role in transmission and epidemiology. Although the
plant-phytoplasma-insect association has been evolving for
>300 million years, nearly all known phytoplasmas have been
discovered as a result of the damage inflicted by phytoplasma diseases
on crops. Few efforts have been made to study phytoplasmas occurring in
non-economically important plants in natural habitats. In this study, a
sub-sample of leafhopper specimens preserved in a large museum
biorepository was analyzed to unveil potential new associations. PCR
screening for phytoplasmas performed on 227 phloem-feeding leafhoppers
collected worldwide from natural habitats revealed the presence of 6
different previously unknown phytoplasma strains. This indicates that
museum collections of herbivorous insects represent a rich and largely
untapped resource for discovery of new plant pathogens, that natural
areas worldwide harbor a diverse but largely undiscovered diversity of
phytoplasmas and potential insect vectors, and that independent
epidemiological cycles occur in such habitats, posing a potential threat
of disease spillover into agricultural systems. Larger-scale future
investigations will contribute to a better understanding of phytoplasma
genetic diversity, insect host range, and insect-borne phytoplasma
transmission and provide an early warning for the emergence of new
phytoplasma diseases across global agroecosystems.