Xanthan production by Xanthomonas albilineans infecting sugarcane stalks
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Publication date
2008
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Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Blanch, María, et al. «Xanthan Production by Xanthomonas Albilineans Infecting Sugarcane Stalks». Journal of Plant Physiology, vol. 165, n.o 4, marzo de 2008, pp. 366-74. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jplph.2007.03.008.
Abstract
Xanthomonas albilineans is the causal organism of leaf scald, a bacterial vascular disease of sugarcane. Xanthomonas may invade the parenchyma between the bundles and cause reddened pockets of gum, identified as a xanthan-like polysaccharide. Since xanthan contains glucuronic acid, the ability of Xanthomonas to produce an active UDP glucose dehydrogenase is often seen as a virulence factor. X. albilineans axenically cultured did not secrete xanthans to Willbrink liquid media, but the use of inoculated sugarcane tissues for producing and characterizing xanthans has been required. A hypothesis about the role of sugarcane polysaccharides to assure the production of bacterial xanthan is discussed.












