Isolation of a species-specific mitochondrial DNA sequence for identification of Tilletia indica, the karnal bunt of wheat fungus
Material type: ArticlePublication details: 1996ISSN:- 0099-2240
- Acids
- Basidiomycotina
- Cell structure
- Cytoplasm
- Cytoplasmic organelles
- Developmental stages
- Fungi AGROVOC
- Genetic engineering
- Genomes AGROVOC
- Gramineae
- Molecular hybridization
- Nucleic acids
- Nucleic compounds
- Organic acids
- Pathogenesis
- Plant developmental stages
- Plant diseases AGROVOC
- Plant genetics and breeding NOT IN AGROVOC
- Protoplasm
- Tilletia
- Ustilaginales
- Triticum AGROVOC
- 96-097098
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Article | CIMMYT Knowledge Center: John Woolston Library | AGRIS Collection | 96-097098 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available |
references US (DNAL 448.3 Ap5)
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from five isolates of Tilletia indica was isolated and digested with several restriction enzymes. A 2.3-kb EcoRI fragment was chosen, cloned, and shown to hybridize with total DNA restricted with EcoRI from T. indica and not from a morphologically similar smut fungus, Tilletia barclayana. The clone was partially sequenced, and primers were designed and tested under high-stringency conditions in PCR assays. The primer pair Ti1/Ti4 amplified a 2.3-kb fragment from total DNA of 17 T. indica isolates from India, Pakistan, and Mexico. DNA from 25 isolates of other smut fungi (T. barclayana, Tilletia foetida, Tilletia caries, Tilletia fusca, and Tilletia controversa) did not produce any bands, as detected by ethidium bromide-stained agarose gels and Southern hybridizations. The sensitivity of the assay was determined and increased by using a single nested primer in a second round of amplification, so that 1 pg of total mycelial DNA could be detected. The results indicated that the primers which originated from a cloned mtDNA sequence can be used to differentiate T. indica from other Tilletia species and have the potential to identify teliospores contaminating wheat seeds
English
AGRIS Collection