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Glickman Announces New Research to Combat Pierce's Disease

By Marcia  Wood
April 14, 2000

WASHINGTON, April 14, 2000--Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman  today announced a new $500,000 research partnership to protect vulnerable  vineyards from the microbe that causes Pierce's disease. USDA's Agricultural Research Service and  Brazilian scientists will work together to sequence the genome of the  microbe that causes Pierce's disease.

"By working together to identify the microbe's genetic makeup, we may  be able to design new and powerful strategies to thwart it," said  Glickman, who met last month in Temecula with California's growers  concerned about the impact of Pierce's disease in their vineyards.

In Northern California, Pierce's disease has chronically attacked  vineyards, costing growers $33 million from 1995 to 1997 alone. In  California's Temecula Valley, south of Los Angeles, the disease has caused  an estimated $6 million in damage to vineyards since 1997.

Pierce's disease is caused by a bacterium, Xylella fastidiosa.  It can be carried by a half-inch-long insect known as the glassy-winged  sharpshooter, which arrived in Southern California in the mid-1990s. The  pest can harbor Xylella in its gut, then move it into plants when  it punctures grapevine stems to feed on nutritious sap. Once inside a  grapevine, X. fastidiosa bacteria multiply, blocking the flow of  water and nutrients. Severely infected vines die. Pierce's disease affects  wine, table, and raisin grapes. Neither the insect carrier nor the disease  harms humans.

The ARS and Brazilian scientists in this joint research effort intend  to discover the sequence of all of the genes in the Xylella strain  that is infecting Temecula Valley grapevines.

Edwin L. Civerolo, with ARS in  Davis, Calif., will lead the project jointly with Andrew J.G. Simpson of  the Ludwig Institute for Cancer  Research at São Paulo. Simpson is DNA Coordinator of the Organization for Nucleotide  Sequencing and Analysis at São Paulo, where scientists sequenced the  genome of a related Xylella strain that causes disease in citrus,  making them the first in the world to sequence the genome of a plant  pathogen.

The American Vineyard Foundation and  the California Department of Food and  Agriculture will each contribute $62,500 to the research, matching  USDA funding of $125,000. The São Paulo  State Research Foundation in Brazil will contribute $250,000 to the  effort, which is expected to take less than a year to complete.


Scientific contact: Judy St. John, ARS National Program Staff,  Beltsville, Md., phone (301) 504-6252, fax (301) 504-4663, jsj@ars.usda.gov.


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