4 research outputs found
Re-evaluating the taxonomic status of Phaeoisariopsis griseola, the causal agent of angular leaf spot of bean
Angular leaf spot of Phaseolus vulgaris is a serious disease
caused by Phaeoisariopsis griseola, in which two major gene pools
occur, namely Andean and Middle-American. Sequence analysis of the SSU region
of nrDNA revealed the genus Phaeoisariopsis to be indistinguishable
from other hyphomycete anamorph genera associated with
Mycosphaerella, namely Pseudocercospora and
Stigmina. A new combination is therefore proposed in the genus
Pseudocercospora, a name to be conserved over
Phaeoisariopsis and Stigmina. Further comparisons by means
of morphology, cultural characteristics, and DNA sequence analysis of the ITS,
calmodulin, and actin gene regions delineated two groups within P.
griseola, which are recognised as two formae, namely f. griseola
and f. mesoamericana
Evolutionary history of Phakopsora pachyrhizi (the Asian soybean rust) in Brazil based on nucleotide sequences of the internal transcribed spacer region of the nuclear ribosomal DNA
Phakopsora pachyrhizi has dispersed globally and brought severe economic losses to soybean growers. The fungus has been established in Brazil since 2002 and is found nationwide. To gather information on the temporal and spatial patterns of genetic variation in P. pachyrhizi , we sequenced the nuclear internal transcribed spacer regions (ITS1 and ITS2). Total genomic DNA was extracted using either lyophilized urediniospores or lesions removed from infected leaves sampled from 26 soybean fields in Brazil and one field in South Africa. Cloning prior to sequencing was necessary because direct sequencing of PCR amplicons gave partially unreadable electrophoretograms with peak displacements suggestive of multiple sequences with length polymorphism. Sequences were determined from four clones per field. ITS sequences from African or Asian isolates available from the GenBank were included in the analyses. Independent sequence alignments of the ITS1 and ITS2 datasets identified 27 and 19 ribotypes, respectively. Molecular phylogeographic analyses revealed that ribotypes of widespread distribution in Brazil displayed characteristics of ancestrality and were shared with Africa and Asia, while ribotypes of rare occurrence in Brazil were indigenous. The results suggest P. pachyrhizi found in Brazil as originating from multiple, independent long-distance dispersal events