High-Throughput Inoculation of Citrus Germplasm for HLB Resistance Screening

High-Throughput Inoculation of Citrus Germplasm for HLB Resistance Screening

Report Date: 04/15/2020
Project: 18-065C   Year: 2020
Category: Plant Improvement
Author: Ed Stover
Sponsor: Citrus Research and Development Foundation

Project rationale and focus: The driving force for this three-year project is the need to evaluate citrus germplasm for tolerance to HLB, including germplasm transformed to express proteins that might mitigate HLB, which requires citrus be inoculated with CLas.  Citrus can be bud-inoculated, but since the disease is naturally spread by the Asian citrus psyllid, the use of psyllids for inoculations more closely resembles “natural infection”, while bud-inoculations might overwhelm some defense responses. CRDF funds supported high-throughput inoculations to evaluate HLB resistance in citrus germplasm developed by Drs. Ed Stover and Kim Bowman. The funds cover the costs associated with establishing and maintaining colonies of infected psyllids; equipment such as insect cages; PCR supplies for assays on psyllid and plant samples from infected colonies; and two GS-7 USDA technicians. A career base-funded USDA technician is also assigned ~50% to the program. USDA provides greenhouses, walk-in chambers and laboratory space to accommodate rearing and inoculations.   Most recent quarter:A partial shut-down of USHRL was initiated 3/20/2020, as a response to the Covid-19 pandemic. ACP colonies are Stover lab:5460 ACP used for inoculating 390 detached leaves, 78 no-choice small trees ,and seven homogenate assays of peptides. Bowman lab:           Prepared a group of grafted plants and planned to ACP-inoculate in March, but this experiment was disrupted by the Covid-19 slowdown.  These ill be inoculated when personnel are allowed more extensive time at USHRL Other users:·           180 for Robert Shatters ·         500 for Yongping Duan       


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