LAKE ALFRED, Fla. — Sometimes in science, a new perspective brings an “a ha!” moment. That’s what one senior researcher at the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences believes happened with his latest research on Huanglongbing (HLB), or citrus greening.
HLB is a worldwide, devastating citrus disease caused by Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus (CLas), a bacterium that settles into the tree’s phloem — its interior vascular system — eventually killing the tree. Since first found in Florida in 2005, it has infected virtually every grove in Florida and cost the citrus industry billions of dollars.
UF/IFAS’ Nian Wang’s most recent research describes in detail how HLB causes damage to citrus trees and presents the case that HLB is a pathogen-triggered immune disease. A pathogen-triggered immune disease is a disease that results from the activation of an organism’s immune cells fighting a pathogen (a virus, bacteria, or parasite) that invades an organism, in this case, the citrus plant.
This is the first time that this explanation of HLB symptoms as pathogen-triggered immune responses has been presented and defended. Seeing HLB in this new context may mean finding new solutions to the disease, faster. Pathogen-triggered immune diseases have not been reported in the world of plants that includes over 250,000 species but are common in humans.
Scientists don’t fully understand how the pathogen that causes HLB damages infected citrus plants because it has not been cultured in artificial media. With this new evidence that supports a premise that HLB is an immune-mediated disease, researchers can see new light on how to manage HLB.
Through his research Wang, has shown HLB infection stimulates systemic and chronic immune responses in phloem tissue, especially overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which are part of the plant’s immune response. Chronic and excessive ROS production is responsible for systemic cell death of phloem tissues, which in turn causes HLB symptoms. This supports the hypothesis that HLB is an immune-mediated disease.
Antioxidants and immunoregulators are commonly used to treat human immune-mediated diseases. They halt or reduce the process that results in cell death. In citrus, the researchers tested whether growth hormones like gibberellin acid (GA) and antioxidants (uric acid and rutin) could impact cell death triggered by the infection and, therefore, block or reduce HLB symptoms.
The researchers found the GA and uric acid had an encouraging positive impact on infected trees. This has also been supported by other research in process at the UF/IFAS Citrus Research and Education Center.
“Our findings allow us to control HLB by mitigating ROS with integrated horticultural measures, genetic improvements of citrus varieties with antioxidant enzymes, generating non-transgenic HLB resistant/tolerant citrus varieties by editing key genes required for CLas-triggered ROS production, and using CTV-mediated expression of antioxidant enzymes and silencing of key genes required for CLas-triggered ROS production,” said Wang, a professor of microbiology and cell science at UF/IFAS.
Wang’s research also tested existing grove management practices that integrate antioxidants, micronutrients (activating antioxidant enzymes), gibberellin (mitigating ROS, regulating immune response, and promoting new growth) and optimized fertilization and irrigation (reducing ROS production) that are available in Florida. All the products tested, except the antioxidants, have already been registered for citrus production, thus can be easily adopted by citrus growers.
Wang’s research has also identified the RBOHD gene to be the main producer of CLas-triggered ROS. With this, the researchers can now “edit (using CRISPR technology)” or “silence” RBOHD or specific receptor gene(s) responsible for RBOHD activation and the resulting cell death of phloem tissues and HLB symptom development. It is expected these approaches will allow economic and efficient citrus production in HLB endemic citrus production regions such as Florida and Texas and provide the long-term solution against HLB for all citrus production regions of U.S. (including California) in case that HLB becomes endemic in the future.
The research was recently published in Nature Communications in January 2022.
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The mission of the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) is to develop knowledge relevant to agricultural, human, and natural resources and to make that knowledge available to sustain and enhance the quality of human life. With more than a dozen research facilities, 67 county Extension offices, and award-winning students and faculty in the UF College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, UF/IFAS brings science-based solutions to the state’s agricultural and natural resources industries, and all Florida residents.