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Molecular polymorphism and phenotypic diversity in the Eutypa dieback pathogen Eutypa lata

Travadon, R.

Molecular polymorphism and phenotypic diversity in the Eutypa dieback pathogen Eutypa lata - St. Paul, MN (USA) : American Phytopathological Society, 2015.

Peer review Open Access

Pathogen adaptation to different hosts can lead to specialization and, when coupled with reproductive isolation, genome-wide differentiation and ecological speciation. We tested the hypothesis of host specialization among California populations of Eutypa lata (causal fungus of Eutypa dieback of grapevine and apricot), which is reported from >90 species. Genetic analyses of nine microsatellite loci in 182 isolates from three hosts (grapevine, apricot, and willow) at three locations were complemented by cross-inoculations on cultivated hosts grapevine and apricot to reveal patterns of host specialization. The cultivated hosts are likely more important sources of inoculum than the wild host willow, based on our findings of higher pathogen prevalence and allelic richness in grapevine and apricot. High levels of gene flow among all three hosts and locations, and no grouping by clustering analyses, suggest neither host nor geographic differentiation. Cross-inoculations revealed diversified phenotypes harboring various performance levels in grapevine and apricot, with no apparent correlation with their host of origin. Such phenotypic diversity may enable this pathogen to persist and reproduce as a generalist. Regular genetic reshuffling through sexual recombination, frequent immigration among hosts, and the lack of habitat choice in this passively dispersed fungus may prevent fixation of alleles controlling host specialization.


Text in English

0031-949X 1943-7684 (Online)

https://doi.org/10.1094/PHYTO-04-14-0117-R


Polymorphism
Phenotypic variation
Eutypa lata

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