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Dive into the research topics where Alberto Loschi is active.

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Featured researches published by Alberto Loschi.


European Journal of Plant Pathology | 2005

Hydrogen peroxide localization and antioxidant status in the recovery of apricot plants from European Stone Fruit Yellows

Rita Musetti; Luigi Sanità di Toppi; Marta Martini; Francesca Ferrini; Alberto Loschi; M. A. Favali; Ruggero Osler

Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) localization and roles of peroxidases, malondialdehyde and reduced glutathione were compared in leaves of apricot (Prunus armeniaca) plants asymptomatic, European Stone Fruits Yellows (ESFY)-symptomatic and recovered. Nested PCR analysis revealed that ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma prunorum’, is present in asymptomatic, symptomatic and recovered apricot trees, confirming previous observations on this species, in which recovery does not seem to be related to the disappearance of phytoplasma from the plant.H2O2was detected cytochemically by its reaction with cerium chloride, which produces electron-dense deposits of cerium perhydroxides. H2O2was present in the plasmalemma of the phloem cells of recovered apricot plant leaves, but not in the asymptomatic or symptomatic material. Furthermore, by labelling apricot leaf tissues with diaminobenzidine DAB, no differences were found in the localization of peroxidases.Protein content in asymptomatic, symptomatic and recovered leaves was not significantly different from one another. In contrast, guaiacol peroxidase activity had the following trend: symptomatic > recovered > asymptomatic, whereas reduced glutathione content followed the opposite trend: asymptomatic > recovered > symptomatic. Moreover, no differences were observed in malondialdehyde concentrations between asymptomatic, symptomatic and recovered leaves. The overall results suggest that H2O2 and related metabolites and enzymes appear to be involved in lessening both pathogen virulence and disease symptom expression in ESFY-infected apricot plants.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2013

Phytoplasma-Triggered Ca 2+ Influx Is Involved in Sieve-Tube Blockage

Rita Musetti; Stefanie V. Buxa; Alberto Loschi; Rachele Polizzotto; Karl-Heinz Kogel; Aart J. E. van Bel

Phytoplasmas are obligate, phloem-restricted phytopathogens that are disseminated by phloem-sap-sucking insects. Phytoplasma infection severely impairs assimilate translocation in host plants and might be responsible for massive changes in phloem physiology. Methods to study phytoplasma- induced changes thus far provoked massive, native occlusion artifacts in sieve tubes. Hence, phytoplasma-phloem relationships were investigated here in intact Vicia faba host plants using a set of vital fluorescent probes and confocal laser-scanning microscopy. We focused on the effects of phytoplasma infection on phloem mass-flow performance and evaluated whether phytoplasmas induce sieve-plate occlusion. Apparently, phytoplasma infection brings about Ca(2+) influx into sieve tubes, leading to sieve-plate occlusion by callose deposition or protein plugging. In addition, Ca(2+) influx may confer cell wall thickening of conducting elements. In conclusion, phytoplasma effectors may cause gating of sieve-element Ca(2+) channels leading to sieve-tube occlusion with presumptive dramatic effects on phytoplasma spread and photoassimilate distribution.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2015

Phytoplasma infection in tomato is associated with re-organization of plasma membrane, ER stacks, and actin filaments in sieve elements.

Stefanie V. Buxa; Francesca Degola; Rachele Polizzotto; Federica De Marco; Alberto Loschi; Karl-Heinz Kogel; Luigi Sanità di Toppi; Aart J. E. van Bel; Rita Musetti

Phytoplasmas, biotrophic wall-less prokaryotes, only reside in sieve elements of their host plants. The essentials of the intimate interaction between phytoplasmas and their hosts are poorly understood, which calls for research on potential ultrastructural modifications. We investigated modifications of the sieve-element ultrastructure induced in tomato plants by ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma solani,’ the pathogen associated with the stolbur disease. Phytoplasma infection induces a drastic re-organization of sieve-element substructures including changes in plasma membrane surface and distortion of the sieve-element reticulum. Observations of healthy and stolbur-diseased plants provided evidence for the emergence of structural links between sieve-element plasma membrane and phytoplasmas. One-sided actin aggregates on the phytoplasma surface also inferred a connection between phytoplasma and sieve-element cytoskeleton. Actin filaments displaced from the sieve-element mictoplasm to the surface of the phytoplasmas in infected sieve elements. Western blot analysis revealed a decrease of actin and an increase of ER-resident chaperone luminal binding protein (BiP) in midribs of phytoplasma-infected plants. Collectively, the studies provided novel insights into ultrastructural responses of host sieve elements to phloem-restricted prokaryotes.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2017

Filamentous sieve element proteins are able to limit phloem mass flow, but not phytoplasma spread

Laura Pagliari; Sara Buoso; Simonetta Santi; Alexandra C. U. Furch; Marta Martini; Francesca Degola; Alberto Loschi; Aart J. E. van Bel; Rita Musetti

The lack of correlation between sieve element filament formation, sieve element occlusion, and phytoplasma titre hints at an unknown role for filamentous sieve element proteins in plant defence.


Phytoparasitica | 2016

Transmissible tolerance to European stone fruit yellows (ESFY) in apricot: cross-protection or a plant mediated process?

Ruggero Osler; Stefano Borselli; Paolo Ermacora; Francesca Ferrini; Alberto Loschi; Marta Martini; Serena Moruzzi; Rita Musetti; Michele Giannini; Simone Serra; Nazia Loi

European Stone Fruit Yellows (ESFY) is an emerging disease caused by ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma prunorum’ (‘Ca. P. prunorum’) affecting stone fruits, as apricots. Resistant apricot cultivars are unknown, but it has been demonstrated that individual plants can recover from the disease, behaving as completely tolerant to ESFY. The status of tolerance is transmissible by grafting to successive apricot individuals, but it is not clear whether recovery corresponds to a transmissible tolerance that depends on a plant–mediated reaction or if it is due to a cross-protection promoted by a transmissible protective agent i.e. hypovirulent strain/s of ‘Ca. P. prunorum’. Results achieved after prolonged field experiments support the first hypothesis. Two groups of apricot plants derived from a common recovered mother (one ‘Ca. P. prunorum’-free after heat-treatment and the second not heat-treated, i.e. harbouring potential protective strain/s of the phytoplasma), behaved similarly: no plants from either of the two groups developed stable ESFY symptoms after natural infections. Corresponding groups of plants, derived from symptomatic mothers, developed a high percentage of diseased plants after natural infection. No potential protective ‘Ca. P. prunorum’ hypovirulent strains were detected in the asymptomatic apricot plants. The summarized evidence supports a host-defence induction, likely of epigenetic feature. The present long-term study in apricot represents an uncommon empiric proof supporting the theory of inducible resistance to pathogens in plants.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2016

OHMS**: Phytoplasmas dictate changes in sieve-element ultrastructure to accommodate their requirements for nutrition, multiplication and translocation

Rita Musetti; Laura Pagliari; Stefanie V. Buxa; Francesca Degola; Federica De Marco; Alberto Loschi; Karl-Heinz Kogel; Aart J. E. van Bel

ABSTRACT Phytoplasmas are among the most recently discovered plant pathogenic microorganisms so, many traits of the interactions with host plants and insect vectors are still unclear and need to be investigated. At now, it is impossible to determine the precise sequences leading to the onset of the relationship with the plant host cell. It is still unclear how phytoplasmas, located in the phloem sieve elements, exploit host cell to draw nutrition for their metabolism, growth and multiplication. In this work, basing on microscopical observations, we give insight about the structural interactions established by phytoplasmas and the sieve element plasma membrane, cytoskeleton, sieve endoplasmic reticulum, speculating about a possible functional role.


Micron | 2016

Looking inside phytoplasma-infected sieve elements: A combined microscopy approach using Arabidopsis thaliana as a model plant

Laura Pagliari; Marta Martini; Alberto Loschi; Rita Musetti

Phytoplasmas are phloem-inhabiting plant pathogens that affect over one thousand plant species, representing a severe threat to agriculture. The absence of an effective curative strategy and the economic importance of many affected crops make a priority of studying how plants respond to phytoplasma infection. Nevertheless, the study of phytoplasmas has been hindered by the extreme difficulty of culturing them in vitro and by impediments to natural host plant surveys such as low phytoplasma titre, long plant life cycle and poor knowledge of natural host-plant biology. Stating correspondence between macroscopic symptoms of phytoplasma infected Arabidopsis thaliana and those observed in natural host plants, over the last decade some authors have started to use this plant as a model for studying phytoplasma-plant interactions. Nevertheless, the morphological and ultrastructural modifications occurring in A. thaliana tissues following phytoplasma infection have never been described in detail. In this work, we adopted a combined-microscopy approach to verify if A. thaliana can be considered a reliable model for the study of phytoplasma-plant interactions at the microscopical level. The consistent presence of phytoplasma in infected phloem allowed detailed study of the infection process and the relationship established by phytoplasmas with different components of the sieve elements. In infected A. thaliana, phytoplasmas induced strong disturbances of host plant development that were mainly due to phloem disorganization and impairment. Light microscopy showed collapse, necrosis and hyperplasia of phloem cells. TEM observations of sieve elements identified two common plant-responses to phytoplasma infection: phloem protein agglutination and callose deposition.


Journal of Microscopy | 2016

Combined microscopy and molecular analyses show phloem occlusions and cell wall modifications in tomato leaves in response to ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma solani’

F. De Marco; Laura Pagliari; Francesca Degola; Stefanie V. Buxa; Alberto Loschi; Sylvie Dinant; R. Le Hir; Halima Morin; Simonetta Santi; Rita Musetti

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 of microscopic 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. Phloem hyperplasia 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. Callose amount was higher 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 deposition at sieve plates, was upregulated in symptomatic 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.


Biocontrol Science and Technology | 2017

Genomic-assisted characterisation of Pseudomonas sp. strain Pf4, a potential biocontrol agent in hydroponics

Serena Moruzzi; Giuseppe Firrao; Cesare Polano; Stefano Borselli; Alberto Loschi; Paolo Ermacora; Nazia Loi; Marta Martini

ABSTRACT In an attempt to select potential biocontrol agents against Pythium spp. and Rhizoctonia spp. root pathogens for use in soilless systems, 12 promising bacteria were selected for further investigations. Sequence analysis of the 16S rRNA gene revealed that three strains belonged to the genus Enterobacter, whereas nine strains belonged to the genus Pseudomonas. In in vitro assays, one strain of Pseudomonas sp., Pf4, closely related to Pseudomonas protegens (formerly Pseudomonas fluorescens), showed noteworthy antagonistic activity against two strains of Pythium aphanidermatum and two strains of Rhizoctonia solani AG 1-IB, with average inhibition of mycelial growth >80%. Strain Pf4 was used for in vivo treatments on lamb’s lettuce against R. solani root rot in small-scale hydroponics. Pf4-treated and untreated plants were daily monitored for symptom development and after two weeks of infection, a significant protective effect of Pf4 against root rot was recorded. The survival and population density of Pf4 on roots were also checked, demonstrating a density above the threshold value of 105 CFU g−1 of root required for disease suppression. Known loci for the synthesis of antifungal metabolites, detected using PCR, and draft-genome sequencing of Pf4 demonstrated that Pseudomonas sp. Pf4 has the potential to produce an arsenal of secondary metabolites (plt, phl, ofa and fit-rzx gene clusters) very similar to that of the well-known biocontrol P. protegens strain Pf-5.


Archive | 2019

Micro-Tom Tomato Grafting for Stolbur-Phytoplasma Transmission: Different Grafting Techniques

Sara Buoso; Alberto Loschi

Tomato plant, being a model system in scientific research, is widely used to study plant-phytoplasma interaction. Grafting is the faster and most effective method to obtain infected plants. This chapter describes the greenhouse culture of tomato, cv. Micro-Tom, and different herbaceous grafting techniques for efficient stolbur-phytoplasma transmission.

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