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1.
Leptosphaeria maculans is the most important fungal pathogen of canola (Brassica napus, oilseed rape) that causes the devastating stem canker in canola fields of western Canada. The population genetic structure of L. maculans, represented by nine subpopulations from a 6‐year period and three different provinces in western Canada, was determined using ten minisatellite markers. Isolates collected at different locations in six consecutive years had an even distribution of MAT1‐1 and MAT1‐2 across the nine subpopulations. All subpopulations of L. maculans exhibited a moderate gene diversity (= 0.356–0.585). The majority of the genetic variation occurred within subpopulations. Approximately 8% and 4% of the variations were distributed between sampling year and location, respectively. Genetic distance (FST) results, using analysis of molecular variation (AMOVA), indicated that subpopulation pairing within isolates by year ranged from FST = 0.010 to 0.109, and the location subpopulation ranged from FST = 0.038 to 0.085. Bayesian clustering analyses of multiloci inferred two distinct clusters in all the subpopulations examined. This study indicates a relatively high degree of gene exchange between the different L. maculans isolates. Our results suggest that this can occur in the wide growing areas of canola fields in western Canada. This gene exchange produced different gene allele frequencies and divergence between populations.  相似文献   

2.
Leptosphaeria maculans is the most ubiquitous fungal pathogen of Brassica crops and causes the devastating stem canker disease of oilseed rape worldwide. We used minisatellite markers to determine the genetic structure of L. maculans in four field populations from France. Isolates were collected at three different spatial scales (leaf, 2-m2 field plot, and field) enabling the evaluation of spatial distribution of the mating type alleles and of genetic variability within and among field populations. Within each field population, no gametic disequilibrium between the minisatellite loci was detected and the mating type alleles were present at equal frequencies. Both sexual and asexual reproduction occur in the field, but the genetic structure of these populations is consistent with annual cycles of randomly mating sexual reproduction. All L. maculans field populations had a high level of gene diversity (H = 0.68 to 0.75) and genotypic diversity. Within each field population, the number of genotypes often was very close to the number of isolates. Analysis of molecular variance indicated that >99.5% of the total genetic variability was distributed at a small spatial scale, i.e., within 2-m2 field plots. Population differentiation among the four field populations was low (GST < 0.02), suggesting a high degree of gene exchange between these populations. The high gene flow evidenced here in French populations of L. maculans suggests a rapid countrywide diffusion of novel virulence alleles whenever novel resistance sources are used.  相似文献   

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《遗传学报》2021,48(11):994-1006
Leptosphaeria maculans is a serious concern for canola production worldwide. For effective disease management, knowledge of the pathogen's genetic variability and population structure is a prerequisite. In this study, whole-genome sequencing was performed for 162 of 1590 L. maculans isolates collected in the years 2007–2008 and 2012–2014 in Western Canada. DNA variants in genome-wide and specific regions including avirulence (Avr) genes were characterized. A total of 31,870 high-quality polymorphic DNA variants were used to study L. maculans genetic diversity and population structure. Cluster analysis showed that 150 isolates were clustered into 2 main groups and 4 subgroups by DNA variants located in either Avr or small secreted protein-encoding genes and into 2 main groups and 6 subgroups by genome-wide variants. The analysis of nucleotide diversity and differentiation also confirmed genetic variation within a population and among populations. Principal component analysis with genome-wide variants showed that the isolates collected in 2012–2014 were more genetically diverse than those collected in 2007–2008. Population structure analysis discovered three distinct sub-populations. Although isolates from Saskatchewan and Alberta were of similar genetic composition, Manitoba isolates were highly diverse. Genome-wide association study detected DNA variants in genes AvrLm4-7, Lema_T86300, and Lema_T86310 associated with the years of collection.  相似文献   

5.
 Isoenzymes were used to evaluate gene diversity and genetic differentiation among six populations of wild cherry (Prunus avium L.) in France. We contrast the genetic characteristics of a population resulting from a recent colonization with those of a much older population of the same species. No significant genetic structure was observed among populations; in this respect wild cherry does not differ from other forest trees. No founder effects could be detected in the newly colonized population. To explain the results, we discuss classic explanations for the lack of genetic differentiation among populations, including balancing selection and neutral drift/migration. In order to account for the absence of founder effects, we propose a hypothesis based on the life cycle of forest trees, namely that the length of the juvenile phase reduces the impact of small numbers of initial founders. Received : 26 November 1996 / Accepted : 20 December 1996  相似文献   

6.
A Idnurm  B J Howlett 《Génome》2001,44(2):167-171
An opsin gene (ops) has been characterized from Leptosphaeria maculans, the ascomycete that causes black-leg disease of Brassica species. This is the second opsin identified outside the archaeal and animal kingdoms. The gene encodes a predicted protein with high similarity (70.3%) and identity (53.3%) to the nop-1 opsin of another ascomycete Neurospora crassa. The L. maculans opsin also has identical amino acid residues in 20 of the 22 residues in the retinal-binding pocket of archaeal opsins. Opsin, on the fourth largest chromosome of L. maculans and 22 cM from the mating type locus, is the first cloned gene to be mapped in L. maculans. Opsin is transcribed at high levels in mycelia grown in the presence and absence of light; this pattern is in contrast with that of the N. crassa opsin, which is transcribed only in the light.  相似文献   

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An efficient DNA extraction protocol and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay for detecting Leptosphaeria maculans from infected seed lots of oilseed rape were developed. L. maculans, the causal agent of blackleg, a damaging disease in oilseeds rape/canola worldwide, was listed as a quarantine disease by China in 2009. China imports several millions of tons of oilseeds every year. So there is a high risk that this pathogen will be introduced to China via contaminated seeds. Seed contamination is one of the most significant factors in the global spread of phytopathogens. Detection of L. maculans in infected seed lots by PCR assay is difficult due to the low level of pathogen mycelium/spores on seeds and PCR inhibitors associated with the seeds of oilseed rape. In our study, these two major obstacles were overcome by the development of a two‐step extraction protocol combined with a nested PCR. This extraction protocol (kit extraction after CTAB method) can efficiently extract high‐quality DNA for PCR. Amplification results showed that the detection threshold for conventional PCR and nested PCR was, respectively, 1 ng and 10 fg of DNA per μl in mycelia samples. On contaminated seed lots of oilseed rape, the detection threshold of conventional and nested PCR was 709 fg/μl and 709 ag/μl of DNA, respectively. The DNA extraction protocol and PCR assay developed in this study can be used for rapid and reliable detection of L. maculans from infected seeds of oilseed rape .  相似文献   

9.
Blackleg, caused by Leptosphaeria maculans, is a major disease of oilseed rape (Brassica napus), worldwide, including Australia and France. The aims of these studies were first, to determine if higher levels of resistance to L. maculans could be generated in double haploid (DH) lines derived from spring‐type B. napus cv. Grouse, which has a good level of field resistance to blackleg; and second, to determine whether the resistance to blackleg disease of individual DH lines responds differentially to different L. maculans field populations within and between the two countries. DH lines were extracted from cv. Grouse and tested in field experiments carried out in both France and Australia against natural L. maculans populations. Extracting and screening DH lines were an effective means to select individual lines with greatly improved expression of resistance to blackleg crown canker disease in comparison with the original parental population. However, relative disease resistance rankings for DH lines were not always consistent between sites. The higher level of resistance in France was shown to be because of a high expression level of quantitative resistance in the French growing conditions. Big differences were observed for some DH lines between the 2004 and the 2005 field sites in Australia where the L. maculans populations differed by their virulence on single dominant gene‐based resistant lines derived from Brassica rapa ssp. sylvestris. This differential behaviour could not be clearly explained by the specific resistance genes until now identified in these DH lines. This investigation highlights the potential to derive DH lines with superior levels of resistance to L. maculans compared with parental populations. However, in locations with particularly high pathogen diversity, such as in southern Australia, multiyear and multisite evaluations should be performed to screen for the most efficient material in different situations.  相似文献   

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Current modelling of inoculum transmission from a cropping season to the following one relies on the extrapolation of kernels estimated on data at short distances from punctual sources, because data collected at larger distances are scarce. We estimated the dispersal kernel of Leptosphaeria maculans ascospores from stubble left after harvest in the summer previous to newly sown oilseed rape fields, using phoma stem canker autumn disease severity. We built a dispersal model to analyse the data. Source strengths are described in the spatial domain covered by source fields by a log‐Gaussian spatial process. Infection potentials in the following season are described in the space consisting of the target fields, by a convolution of sources and a power‐exponential dispersal kernel. Data were collected on farmers' fields considered as sources in 2009 and 2011 (72 and 39 observation points) and as targets in 2010 and 2012 (172 and 200 points). We applied the Bayesian approach for model selection and parameter estimation. We obtained fat tail kernels for both data sets. This estimation is the first from data acquired over distances of 0 to 1000 m, using several non‐punctual inoculum sources. It opens the prospect of refining the existing simulators, or developing disease risk maps.  相似文献   

12.
Pulsed field gel electrophoresis experiments show that chromosomal length polymorphisms are produced during meiosis in the ascomycetous plant pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans. Homologues in tetrads of L. maculans were identified on the basis of their binding to chromosome-specific probes that included β-tubulin, nitrate reductase, 18S ribosomal DNA and two Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers. Changes in size of homologues were followed during meiosis. Significant karyotype variation was evident due to the random assortment of parental homologues of different sizes. In most cases, the progeny had the same-sized homologues as the parents; however, in some instances novel-sized homologues were detected that varied in size from those of the parents by up to 50 kb. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that these novel chromosomal length polymorphisms are produced by reciprocal recombination between parental homologous chromosomes of unequal sizes.  相似文献   

13.
Presence of Leptosphaeria maculans Group A and Group B Isolates in Sweden   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Leptosphaeria maculans isolates have been assigned to one of two groups, A or B, on the basis of differences in their characteristics. Group A can further be divided into pathogenicity groups (PG) 2, 3 and 4 and group B into PG1. To determine if isolates belonging to the aggressive canker forming group A are present in Sweden, physiological and genetic characterisation of 120 isolates collected in the year 2000 were performed. Thirty‐seven isolates were classified as belonging to pathogenicity group PG3 and 63 isolates as PG4, based on a cotyledon assay. Twenty isolates did not cause any symptoms at all, and were classified as PG1. When comparing two geographical regions, Skåne and Östergötland, equal numbers of PG3 and PG4 isolates were found. By analysing the isolates by PCR, the collection was further classified into 100 group A isolates and 20 group B isolates. A corresponding classification of the isolates was observed when the ability to produce pigments in Czapek Dox broth was examined. The results showed a clear predominance of group A. This was also the case for the isolate collection from 2001. In a detailed survey of disease development in a L. maculans infected winter oilseed rape field in southern Sweden (Skåne), basal stem canker was not observed until early June Although the disease index value increased from 8.4 in June to 18.0 in July, few severely damaged plants were observed before harvest in mid‐July, despite infection with group A isolates.  相似文献   

14.
The inheritance of hypersensitive resistance to Leptosphaeria maculans in a cross between B. oleracea var. alboglabra and B. insularis was studied. Analyses of F1 and F2 progeny suggested that resistance is determined by two dominant, independently-segregating genes. F1 hybrids were semifertile but normal levels of fertility were restored in a proportion of the F2 progeny.  相似文献   

15.
Out of 117 isolates of Leptosphaeria maculans collected from a range of brassica seed crops in south-east England, 26 were virulent when tested on cabbage cv. January King. Of these, 24 were isolated from oil-seed rape (Brassica napus) and the remainder from a swede (B. napus) and a cabbage (B. oleracea) seed crop. Virulent strains were derived from infected stems and from single ascospores of the sexual state present on diseased stubble. In glasshouse tests virulent isolates were not host-specific and caused severe cankers on cabbage, kale, swede, turnip and oil-seed rape; under field conditions, ascospores originating from diseased oil-seed rape stubble produced severe cankers and high levels of seed-borne infection in eight horticultural and vegetable brassica hosts (B. napus, B. campestris and B. oleracea). Virulent and non-virulent types could be distinguished by certain cultural characteristics. On nutrient agar virulent types grew slowly, irregularly and quickly staled whereas non-virulent types grew rapidly, regularly and did not stale. The latter also produced a yellow-brown pigment in liquid culture. The potential for cross-infection of virulent strains originating from oil-seed rape to other brassica seed crops has serious implications for disease incidence on forage and vegetable brassica seed crops.  相似文献   

16.
The dothideomycetous fungus Leptosphaeria maculans comprises a complex of species differing in specificity and pathogenicity on Brassica napus. Twenty-eight isolates were investigated and compared to 20 other species of the Pleosporales order. Sequences of the mating type MAT1-2 (23), fragments of actin (48) and beta-tubulin (45) genes were determined and used for phylogenetic analyses inferred by maximum parsimony, distance, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian approaches. These different approaches using single genes essentially confirmed findings using concatanated sequences. L. maculans formed a monophyletic group separate from Leptosphaeria biglobosa. The L. biglobosa clade encompasses five sub-clades; this finding is consistent with classification made previously on the basis of internal-transcribed sequences of the ribosomal DNA repeat. The propensity for purifying and neutral evolution of the three genes was determined using sliding window analysis, a technique not previously applied to genes of filamentous fungi. For members of the L. maculans species complex, this approach showed that in comparison to actin and beta-tubulin, exonic sequences of MAT1-2 were more diverse and appeared to evolve at a faster rate. However, different regions of MAT1-2 displayed different degrees of sequence conservation. The more conserved upstream region (including the High Mobility Group domain) may be better suited for interspecies differentiation, while the more diverse downstream region is more appropriate for intraspecies comparisons.  相似文献   

17.
Blackleg disease, caused by Leptosphaeria maculans, is one of the most important diseases of rapeseed Brassica napus in Iran as in other regions of the world. The samples including canola petals and seeds were collected during 2014–2015 from canola field in North Iran. Isolates characteristics of fungus were assessed based on the colony growth rate and pycnidia in Potato Dextrose Agar. The pycnidia of the fungus were black, globose to subglobose in shape, the single-celled conidia, hyaline and fusiform with diameters of 4–5 × 1.5–2 μm. Most of the isolates were produced pigment in the liquid culture in variable color brown to black. Thirteen isolates were then separated into pathogenicity groups based on the interactions on B. napus differential cultivars. For the direct detection of seed contamination with L. maculans, PCR was developed using specific primers pair (LmacF, LmacR) which can amplify ITS1 and ITS2 along with the 5.8S rRNA region of L. maculans genome. Based on the followed information and sequence analysis, the fungal isolates from these samples were identified as L. maculans. The findings of this research showed that the disease was aggressive and highly distributed from infested seeds to oilseed rape fields.  相似文献   

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The genetic diversity of soil-borne populations of Fusarium oxysporum was assessed using 350 isolates collected from six different French soils. All isolates were characterised by restriction fragment analysis of the PCR-amplified ribosomal intergenic spacer (IGS). Twenty-six IGS types were identified among the 350 isolates analysed. Five to nine different IGS types were detected in each soil. None of the IGS types was common to all of the soils. An analysis of the molecular variance based on IGS type relationships and frequency revealed that the genetic structure of the populations of F. oxysporum varied widely among the soils. Some populations were both highly diverse within the soils and differentiated between the soils. A possible relationship between the intrapopulation or interpopulation level of diversity and some external factors such as the soil type or the crop history was evaluated. A subsample representative of the diversity of the six populations was further characterised by analysing the genomic distribution of two transposable elements, impala and Fot1. One to 10 copies of the impala element were present in most of the isolates, irrespective of their soil of origin. The Fot1 element was only detected in 40% of the isolates originating from the three populations less diverse in terms of IGS types, but in 82.6% of the isolates originating from the three more diverse populations.  相似文献   

20.
This study was carried out using 155 monoconidial isolates collected from different areas of two major rice growing provinces in northern Iran, including 94 isolates from Guilan and 59 isolates from Mazandaran. Among 94 isolates from Guilan, 92 and two isolates recovered from rice and crabgrass (Digitaria sp.), respectively. All 61 rested isolates from Mazandaran were recovered from rice. All isolates were evaluated for in vitro sexual fertility and mating type status by pairing with Mat 1-1 and Mat 1-2 fertile standard hermaphrodite isolates including Br48 and Th12 (Mat 1-1) and KA9 and TH16 (Mat 1-2). Of 155 isolates, 98 (63.2%) were fertile and 57 (36.8%) were infertile and produced no perithecium when mated with standard isolates. Among 98 fertile isolates, 96 isolates were identified as Mat 1-1 and two isolates as Mat 1-2. All Mat 1-1 isolates were obtained from rice and two Mat 1-2 isolates obtained from crab grass. No Mat 1-2 isolate was identified from rice in this study. Both mating types were found in Guilan but all isolates recovered from Mazandaran were identified as Mat 1-1. Male fertility predominated in fertile Mat 1-1 and Mat 1-2 isolates from all sampling sites in northern Iran, and no female fertility was detected. This is the first report of existence of Mat 1-2 allele in Magnaporthe grisea population in Iran.  相似文献   

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