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AFLP analysis of a worldwide collection of Didymella bryoniae

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2003

Ronald T. KOTHERA
Affiliation:
Clemson University, Coastal Research and Education Center, 2865 Savannah Highway, Charleston, South Carolina 29414, USA. E-mail: tknth@clemson.edu
Anthony P. KEINATH
Affiliation:
Clemson University, Coastal Research and Education Center, 2865 Savannah Highway, Charleston, South Carolina 29414, USA. E-mail: tknth@clemson.edu
Ralph A. DEAN
Affiliation:
North Carolina State University, Fungal Genomics Laboratory, Campus Box 7251, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, USA.
Mark W. FARNHAM
Affiliation:
United States Dept. of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service, US Vegetable Laboratory, 2875 Savannah Highway, Charleston, South Carolina 29414, USA.
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Abstract

Didymella bryoniae (anamorph Phoma cucurbitacearum) is an ascomycete that causes gummy stem blight, a foliar disease that occurs on cucurbits in greenhouses and fields throughout the world. In a previous study using RAPD analysis, little genetic diversity was found among isolates of D. bryoniae from New York and South Carolina, USA. Here we report the use of amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis to assess the genetic variation within a worldwide collection of D. bryoniae. 102 field and greenhouse isolates from ten states in the USA (California, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Texas) and seven other countries (Australia, Canada, China, Greece, Israel, Sweden, and The Netherlands) were examined. Seven different AFLP primer-pair combinations generated 450 bands, of which 134 were polymorphic (30%). Using cluster analysis, two groups and a total of seven subgroups were delineated. Representative isolates varied in their virulence on muskmelon and watermelon seedlings, but the degree of virulence was not strongly associated with AFLP groupings. However, isolates from the northern USA grouped separately from isolates originating from the southern USA.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The British Mycological Society 2003

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Footnotes

Technical contribution No. 4772 of Agriculture and Forestry Research, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina, USA.