Department of Plant Pathology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, United States of America.
Department of Plant Pathology, University of Georgia, Tifton, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Oct 15;13(10):e0205849. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0205849. eCollection 2018.
Corynespora cassiicola is a destructive plant-pathogenic fungus causing widespread target spot epidemics, including outbreaks on cotton, soybean, and tomato in the southeastern United States. Previous studies revealed that populations from the three hosts are genetically distinct and host specialized. Although variation in aggressiveness to cotton and tomato were observed, no genetic diversity was detected within populations sampled from each of these hosts. We aimed to gain a better understanding of the emerging target spot epidemics by developing microsatellite markers for C. cassiicola to assess genetic variation, population structure, and to infer modes of reproduction and mechanisms of dispersal. Two hundred sixty-five isolates from cotton, soybean, tomato, and other host plants were genotyped with 13 microsatellite markers. Genotypic diversity revealed genetic variation within each of the populations collected from different hosts, with the population from cotton dominated by clonal genotypes and showing the least genetic diversity. In addition, C. cassiicola populations on different host species were genetically distinct and structured based on host species. No association between genetic and geographic distances was identified in the tomato populations, and the association in cotton populations was low. However, significant regional geographic structure was detected in the soybean populations of C. cassiicola. These results further support previous findings of introduced host specialized isolates or the evolution of more aggressive strains on each host. The lack of geographic structure suggests that the clones on cotton and tomato spread rapidly, or similar founder populations were established by human-mediated dispersal, and that dispersal is not limited. However, regional geographic structure of populations on soybean suggests limited dispersal among more established populations of C. cassiicola, or genetic differences in founder populations that colonized different geographic areas.
棒孢叶点霉是一种具有破坏性的植物病原菌,可引起广泛的靶斑病流行,包括美国东南部棉花、大豆和番茄上的暴发。先前的研究表明,来自三个宿主的种群在遗传上是不同的,并且是宿主专化的。尽管观察到对棉花和番茄的侵袭力存在变异,但从这些宿主中采样的种群内未检测到遗传多样性。我们旨在通过开发棒孢叶点霉的微卫星标记来更好地了解新兴的靶斑病,以评估遗传变异、种群结构,并推断繁殖方式和扩散机制。使用 13 个微卫星标记对来自棉花、大豆、番茄和其他寄主植物的 265 个分离物进行了基因型分析。基因型多样性揭示了从不同宿主收集的每个种群内的遗传变异,来自棉花的种群以无性基因型为主,表现出最少的遗传多样性。此外,不同宿主物种上的 C. cassiicola 种群在遗传上是不同的,并基于宿主物种进行结构划分。在番茄种群中未发现遗传和地理距离之间存在关联,而在棉花种群中关联程度较低。然而,在大豆种群中检测到 C. cassiicola 的显著区域地理结构。这些结果进一步支持了先前关于引入的宿主专化分离物或在每个宿主上进化出更具侵袭性菌株的发现。地理结构的缺乏表明棉花和番茄上的无性系迅速传播,或者通过人为传播建立了相似的创始种群,并且扩散不受限制。然而,大豆种群的区域地理结构表明,C. cassiicola 较成熟种群的扩散有限,或者是在不同地理区域殖民的创始种群存在遗传差异。