Combined microscopy and molecular analyses show phloem occlusions and cell wall modifications in tomato leaves in response to ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma solani’
Callose deposition, phloem-protein conformational changes
and cell wall thickening are calcium-mediated occlusions
occurring in the plant sieve elements in response to different
biotic and abiotic stresses. However, the significance of
these structures in plant–phytoplasma interactions requires
in-depth investigations. We adopted a novel integrated approach,
based on the combined use ofmicroscopic and molecular
analyses, to investigate the structural modifications
induced in tomato leaf tissues in presence of phytoplasmas,
focusing on vascular bundles and on the occlusion structures.
Phloemhyperplasia and string-like arrangement of xylem vessels
were found in infected vascular tissue. The diverse occlusion
structures were differentially modulated in the phloem in
response to phytoplasma infection. Calloseamountwashigher
in midribs from infected plants than in healthy ones. Callose
was observed at sieve plates but not at pore-plasmodesma
units. A putative callose synthase gene encoding a protein
with high similarity to Arabidopsis CalS7, responsible for callose
depositionat sieve plates,wasupregulated insymptomatic
leaves, indicating a modulation in the response to stolbur infection.
P-proteins showed configuration changes in infected
sieve elements, exhibiting condensation of the filaments. The
transcripts for a putative P-protein 2 and a sieve element
occlusion-related protein were localized in the phloem but
only the first one was modulated in the infected tissues.