Abstracts
Fusarium graminearum isolates causing Fusarium head blight in wheat were collected in Brazil and analyzed by random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers and vegetative compatibility grouping (VCG). Nitrate non-utilizing mutants (nit) from each isolate were paired to verify heterokaryon formation. Three VCGs were identified among F. graminearum isolates: VCG1 included F-2, F-3 and F-4 isolates; VCG2 included F-1, F-6 and F-9 isolates; VCG3 included F-5, F-7 and F-8 isolates. Based on PCR amplification with eight different primers, the isolates showed great genetic similarity among themselves. Dendrogram analysis demonstrated two RAPD groups: Group A, consisting of isolates F-2 and F-9, and Group B, composed of the remaining isolates. Results suggest the clonal origin of F. graminearum isolates.
Fusarium graminearum; genetic variability; RAPD; vegetative compatibility groups
Isolados de Fusarium graminearum, obtidos de espigas de trigo com sintomas de Giberela, foram analisados pela técnica do Polimorfismo de DNA Amplificado ao Acaso (RAPD) e pelos Grupos de Compatibilidade Vegetativa (GCV). Mutantes auxotróficos (nit) de cada isolado foram pareados em todas as combinações possíveis, para a formação de heterocários. Três GCVs foram identificados: GCV1, incluindo os isolados F-2, F-3 e F-4; GCV2, incluindo os isolados F-1, F-6 e F-9; e GCV3, formado pelos isolados F-5, F-7 e F-8. Dois grupos foram identificados com base nos marcadores de RAPD: o grupo A, formado pelos isolados F-2 e F-9, e o grupo B, composto pelos demais isolados, os quais apresentaram grande similaridade entre si. Os resultados sugerem a origem clonal dos isolados de F. graminearum analisados.
Fusarium graminearum; grupos de compatibilidade vegetativa; RAPD; variabilidade genética
NOTE
CROP PRODUCTION
Vegetative compatibility and molecular characterization of Fusarium graminearum isolates from the State of Paraná, Brazil
Compatibilidade vegetativa e caracterização molecular de isolados patogênicos de Fusarium graminearum do Estado do Paraná
Cleverson BussoI; Edilson Nobuyoshi KaneshimaII; Francisco de Assis FrancoIII; Carmen Boto QuerolI; Marialba Avezum Alves de Castro-PradoI,1
IDepartamento de Biologia Celular e Genética, Universidade Estadual de Maringá (UEM). Av. Colombo 5790, 87020-900, Maringá, PR, Brasil. E-mail: maacprado@uem.br
IIDepartamento de Análises Clínicas, UEM, Maringá, PR, Brasil
IIICooperativa Central de Pesquisa Agrícola, BR 467, Km 98 POX 301, Cascavel, PR, Brasil
ABSTRACT
Fusarium graminearum isolates causing Fusarium head blight in wheat were collected in Brazil and analyzed by random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers and vegetative compatibility grouping (VCG). Nitrate non-utilizing mutants (nit) from each isolate were paired to verify heterokaryon formation. Three VCGs were identified among F. graminearum isolates: VCG1 included F-2, F-3 and F-4 isolates; VCG2 included F-1, F-6 and F-9 isolates; VCG3 included F-5, F-7 and F-8 isolates. Based on PCR amplification with eight different primers, the isolates showed great genetic similarity among themselves. Dendrogram analysis demonstrated two RAPD groups: Group A, consisting of isolates F-2 and F-9, and Group B, composed of the remaining isolates. Results suggest the clonal origin of F. graminearum isolates.
Key words:Fusarium graminearum, genetic variability, RAPD, vegetative compatibility groups.
RESUMO
Isolados de Fusarium graminearum, obtidos de espigas de trigo com sintomas de Giberela, foram analisados pela técnica do Polimorfismo de DNA Amplificado ao Acaso (RAPD) e pelos Grupos de Compatibilidade Vegetativa (GCV). Mutantes auxotróficos (nit) de cada isolado foram pareados em todas as combinações possíveis, para a formação de heterocários. Três GCVs foram identificados: GCV1, incluindo os isolados F-2, F-3 e F-4; GCV2, incluindo os isolados F-1, F-6 e F-9; e GCV3, formado pelos isolados F-5, F-7 e F-8. Dois grupos foram identificados com base nos marcadores de RAPD: o grupo A, formado pelos isolados F-2 e F-9, e o grupo B, composto pelos demais isolados, os quais apresentaram grande similaridade entre si. Os resultados sugerem a origem clonal dos isolados de F. graminearum analisados.
Palavras-chave:Fusarium graminearum, grupos de compatibilidade vegetativa, RAPD, variabilidade genética.
Fusarium graminearum (teleomorphic Gibberella zeae) is the causal agent of Fusarium head blight (FHB) of wheat. Disease is an agricultural great problem, being responsible for losses yearly due to lower yield and quality of the grain. In addiction, grains infected with F. graminearum contain mycotoxins that are harmful to humans and domestic animals. Most of wheat varieties are susceptible to the pathogen, and at present, no fungicides are available to control FHB efficiently (JURADO et al., 2006; MIEDANER, 1997).
Effective management of FHB, including incorporation of improved levels of resistance of cultivars and use of cultural options is needed to minimize the impact of the disease and ensure the sustainability of the crop in the region. For applying efficient FHB management strategies to augment host resistance, knowledge about the genetic diversity and structure of naturally occurring pathogen populations is crucial (BOTTALICO & PERRONE, 2002; MIEDANER, 1997).
Different methods have been used to assess genetic variability in populations of phytopathogenic fungi such as RAPD analyses and vegetative compatibility grouping (VCG). High levels of genotypic diversity in populations of F. graminearum, using RAPD markers, were demonstrated by DUSABENYAGASANI et al. (1999) and GILBERT et al. (2001). Vegetative compatibility phenotypes, on the other hand, are naturally occurring genetic markers which have been used to differentiate isolates of Fusarium species (BAAYEN et al., 1998; PUHALLA, 1985). VCG is regulated by multiple vegetative incompatibility loci, named vic or het, so that only compatible strains, believed to be clonally related, may produce stable heterokaryons amongst themselves and undergo parasexual recombination (KLITTICH & LESLIE, 1988; PUHALLA, 1985).
In this study, our aim was to examine the genetic variability of Brazilian F. graminearum isolates using genetic (VCG) and molecular (RAPD) methods.
Monospore isolates of F. graminearum (F-1 to F-9) were obtained from wheat spikes with symptoms of head blight. Isolates had been collected on August (F-1 to F-6) and September (F-7 to F-9) of 2004, in the Experimental Farm of Coodetec (Palotina, PR, Brazil) from cultivars CD104 (F-1 and F-5), CD 105 (F-2 and F-4), CD 111 (F-6), CDI 200205 (F-3), CDI 200104 (F-7 and F-8) and CDI 200106 (F-9). Species, identified at the Mycology Department of the Federal University of Pernambuco in Recife, PE, Brazil, were maintained at a temperature of 5°C. Oatmeal-Agar (OA), Minimal Medium (MM) and Complete Medium were used (CM) (PUHALLA, 1985). Mutants of F. graminearum which were unable to use nitrate as a nitrogen source (nit) were obtained in MM + NaNO3 (0.2%) + KClO3 (3.0%). Mycelium plugs (5mm) for each nit mutant were paired in petri dishes containing MM + NaNO3 for vegetative complementation tests. Plates were incubated at 24±2°C during 7 to 21 days and then analyzed for heterokaryon formation. Pure cultures of F. graminearum were grown in CM for 4 days at 25°C for the genomic DNA extraction and RAPD-PCR amplification (LOUDON et al., 1993). All experiments were repeated at least twice. Primers PR2 (5' TGCCGAGCTG 3'), PR3 (5' CCTTGACGCA 3'), PR4 (5' CAGGCCCTTC 3'), OPW2 (5' TGCCGAGCTG 3'), OPW7 (5' GAAACGGGTG 3'), OPW8 (5' GTGACGTAGG 3'), OPW9 (5' GGGTAACGCC 3') and OPW10 (5' GTGATCGCAG 3') were used. Dendrogram was produced by cluster analysis using the unweighted pair-grouped method by arithmetic average (UPGMA).
Mutants nit from F1 to F-9 isolates were divided into three distinct phenotypic classes: nit1 (nitrate non-utilizing), Nit3 (nitrite and nitrate non-utilizing), and NitM (hypoxanthine and nitrate non-utilizing) (PUHALLA, 1985). Three distinct vegetative compatibility groupings (VCG) were identified by pairing nit mutants of F-1 to F-9 isolates in all possible combinations: VCG1 comprised isolates F-2, F-3 and F-4; VCG2 comprised isolates F-1, F-6 and F-9; VCG3 formed by F-5, F-7 and F-8 isolates. Mutants NitM of isolates F-6 and F-9 showed vegetative complementation among themselves suggesting the existence of multiple loci controlling the production of the molybdenum-containing co-factor in F. graminearum, such as in Neurospora crassa and F. moniliforme (KLITTICH & LESLIE, 1988; TOMSETT & GARRETT, 1980).
RAPD analyses were performed using eight different random primers. Figure 1a shows an additional band (polymorphic) of approximately 2000 bp in isolate F-2. On the other hand, isolates F-2 and F-9 showed polymorphism in relation to other isolates owing to the absence of an approximately 1300 bp band and additional band of approximately 650 bp (Figure 1b). Isolates were separated in two RAPD groups: Group A made up of isolates F-2 and F-9, with 86.4% similarity and Group B made up of the remaining isolates (F-1, F-3, F-4, F-5, F-6, F-7 and F-8) (Figure 2). Conversely, VCG analyses separated F-2 and F-9 isolates into VCG1 and VCG2, respectively. Likewise, isolates F-1, F-3, F-4, F-5, F-6, F-7 and F-8, included in Group B using molecular markers, were separated into different VCGs. F-5 and F-6 isolates presented great genetic similarity when PCR markers were used, but could be differentiated when the VCG method was employed. Although isolates F-1, F-4, F-7 and F-8 showed 86.8% similarity in the molecular analysis, they were located in distinct VCGs. Similar results were obtained in the characterization of F. graminearum isolates from Canada. Isolates were grouped into 14 VCGs, but were contrastingly separate in only nine genetically distinct groups when analyzed by PCR (Gilbert et al., 2001).
Although only a small number of F. graminearum isolates were analyzed in the present work, they were collected from a single and restricted geographic area, which had just suffered the first incidence of the Fusarium head blight. Probably exchanges of nuclear material through sexual or parasexual recombination among isolates of the same VCG, had still not occurred.
This fact may justify the low genetic variability among F-1 to F-9 isolates (Figure 1). Genetic variability in populations of G. zeae from two small areas in Kansas and North Dakota (USA) were identified by ZELLER et al. (2003). Whereas genetic variability was related to the occurrence of genetic recombination among the isolates, the authors suggested that both populations belonged to a single and panmitic population.
The occurrence of closely related genotypes in the same geographic area suggested that F. graminearum population under analysis was fairly clonal. Other analyses involving a larger number of organisms from distinct geographical origins and harvests they should be undertaken to confirm this hypothesis.
The utilization of VCG analysis coupled to RAPD analysis indicates that F. graminearum isolates are fairly similar, with three VCGs and two RAPD clusters.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was partly supported by the Central Cooperative for Agricultural Research and by CNPq (Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development).
Received 03.28.06
Approved 02.14.07
References
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Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
05 Oct 2007 -
Date of issue
Dec 2007
History
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Accepted
14 Feb 2007 -
Received
28 Mar 2006