Submitted:
18 February 2026
Posted:
18 February 2026
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Abstract
Brown spot on the leaf sheath is an emerging disease of sweet corn (Zea mays L.) in Sinaloa, Mexico, with an unknown etiology. This study aimed to identify the causal agent of the disease and assess its pathogenicity on commercial sweet corn hybrids. Bacterial strains were isolated from symptomatic leaf sheaths collected from commercial fields. Identification was performed through biochemical profiling (API 50CHB/E), pathogenicity tests on alternative hosts (potato, onion, celery), and molecular analysis (16S rRNA gene sequencing and phylogenetic reconstruction). Pathogenicity and virulence were confirmed by inoculating four sweet corn hybrids in a greenhouse. The strains were Gram-negative rods, identified as Burkholderia gladioli based on biochemical profiles and molecular data (99.8% 16S rRNA similarity; phylogenetic clustering within the B. gladioli clade). In greenhouse trials, the strains induced brown spot lesions on the leaf sheaths of all tested hybrids, replicating field symptoms fulfilling Koch’s postulates. This is the first report of B. gladioli as the causal agent of brown spot on the leaf sheath of sweet corn in Mexico. The pathogen’s broad host range highlights its potential as an emerging threat to horticultural crops in the region.
