Molecular fingerprinting of Botrytis cinerea population structure from different hosts

Botrytis cinerea (teleomorph: Botryotinia fuckeliana) causes gray mold disease on vegetable crops in greenhouses. Profound knowledge on pathogen diversity is necessary for efficiently disease management. In this study, forty-two B. cinerea isolates collected from 36 different greenhouses in Antalya...

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Main Authors: İlknur Polat, Görkem Sülü, Aytül Kitapçı, Emine Gümrükçü, Ömür Baysal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bati Akdeniz Agricultural Research Institute 2018-12-01
Series:Derim
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.derim.com.tr/download/article-file/595691
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spelling doaj-5c2ed62569094178a10a43ab3b99e3fb2020-11-25T03:32:57ZengBati Akdeniz Agricultural Research InstituteDerim1300-34961300-34962018-12-0135212113410.16882/derim.2018.410051Molecular fingerprinting of Botrytis cinerea population structure from different hostsİlknur PolatGörkem SülüAytül KitapçıEmine GümrükçüÖmür BaysalBotrytis cinerea (teleomorph: Botryotinia fuckeliana) causes gray mold disease on vegetable crops in greenhouses. Profound knowledge on pathogen diversity is necessary for efficiently disease management. In this study, forty-two B. cinerea isolates collected from 36 different greenhouses in Antalya province of Turkey were investigated. Twelve SRAP (sequence-related amplified polymorphism) and 18 ISSR (inter simple sequence repeat) primers producing high polymorphic fragments were used to genetic diversity of B. cinerea isolates infecting dill, basil, lettuce, bean, cucumber, tomato, pepper and eggplant. The unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic average analysis (UPGMA) was used to evaluate of combined ISSR and SRAP data showing a similarity range 0.15-0.90 among the isolates. Cophenetic correlation of the tree was high level (r=0.93). Interestingly, cluster analysis showed a divergent group consisting of lettuce isolates which were genetically different from the other isolates. On the other hand, transposable elements (Flipper and Boty) were detected among isolates from all the hosts. Isolates containing only the Fliper element were detected. The results showed that genetically characterized B. cinerea populations by a high level of genetic diversity were associated with genotype flow and the evolutionary potential of B. cinerea. In further studies, the newly tested molecular markers are useful and can be suggested for analyzing of genetic diversity and population structure of this pathogen on different hosts.http://www.derim.com.tr/download/article-file/595691Gray moldGenetic diversityHost differentiationISSRSRAPTransposable elements
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author İlknur Polat
Görkem Sülü
Aytül Kitapçı
Emine Gümrükçü
Ömür Baysal
spellingShingle İlknur Polat
Görkem Sülü
Aytül Kitapçı
Emine Gümrükçü
Ömür Baysal
Molecular fingerprinting of Botrytis cinerea population structure from different hosts
Derim
Gray mold
Genetic diversity
Host differentiation
ISSR
SRAP
Transposable elements
author_facet İlknur Polat
Görkem Sülü
Aytül Kitapçı
Emine Gümrükçü
Ömür Baysal
author_sort İlknur Polat
title Molecular fingerprinting of Botrytis cinerea population structure from different hosts
title_short Molecular fingerprinting of Botrytis cinerea population structure from different hosts
title_full Molecular fingerprinting of Botrytis cinerea population structure from different hosts
title_fullStr Molecular fingerprinting of Botrytis cinerea population structure from different hosts
title_full_unstemmed Molecular fingerprinting of Botrytis cinerea population structure from different hosts
title_sort molecular fingerprinting of botrytis cinerea population structure from different hosts
publisher Bati Akdeniz Agricultural Research Institute
series Derim
issn 1300-3496
1300-3496
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Botrytis cinerea (teleomorph: Botryotinia fuckeliana) causes gray mold disease on vegetable crops in greenhouses. Profound knowledge on pathogen diversity is necessary for efficiently disease management. In this study, forty-two B. cinerea isolates collected from 36 different greenhouses in Antalya province of Turkey were investigated. Twelve SRAP (sequence-related amplified polymorphism) and 18 ISSR (inter simple sequence repeat) primers producing high polymorphic fragments were used to genetic diversity of B. cinerea isolates infecting dill, basil, lettuce, bean, cucumber, tomato, pepper and eggplant. The unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic average analysis (UPGMA) was used to evaluate of combined ISSR and SRAP data showing a similarity range 0.15-0.90 among the isolates. Cophenetic correlation of the tree was high level (r=0.93). Interestingly, cluster analysis showed a divergent group consisting of lettuce isolates which were genetically different from the other isolates. On the other hand, transposable elements (Flipper and Boty) were detected among isolates from all the hosts. Isolates containing only the Fliper element were detected. The results showed that genetically characterized B. cinerea populations by a high level of genetic diversity were associated with genotype flow and the evolutionary potential of B. cinerea. In further studies, the newly tested molecular markers are useful and can be suggested for analyzing of genetic diversity and population structure of this pathogen on different hosts.
topic Gray mold
Genetic diversity
Host differentiation
ISSR
SRAP
Transposable elements
url http://www.derim.com.tr/download/article-file/595691
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