Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15018
Title: Virulence and genetic diversity among isolates of Mycosphaerella fijiensis in two regions of Brazil
Authors: Silva, G. F.
Santos, V. S.
Sousa, Nelcimar Reis
Hanada, Rogério Eiji
Gasparotto, Luadir
Keywords: Banana
Controlled Study
Cultivar
Fungal Plant Disease
Fungal Virulence
Fungus Isolation
Genetic Distance
Genetic Variability
Mycosphaerella
Mycosphaerella Fijiensis
Nonhuman
Phylogenetic Tree
Simple Sequence Repeat
Ascomycetes
Polymorphism, Genetic
Genetics
Isolation And Purification
Microbiology
Musa
Pathogenicity
Virulence
Microsatellite Dna
Ascomycota
Microsatellite Repeats
Musa
Polymorphism, Genetic
Virulence
Issue Date: 2016
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Genetics and Molecular Research
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 15, Número 2
Abstract: Black sigatoka, caused by the fungus Mycosphaerella fijiensis (anamorphic stage: Paracercospora fijiensis), was first detected in Brazil in early 1998 in the Benjamin Constant and Tabatinga municipalities in the State of Amazonas, near to where the borders of Brazil, Colombia, and Peru converge. Understanding how cultivars react to the pathogen, and characterizing the genetic variability of isolates from two distant and distinct banana-producing regions, are important for determining the virulence of M. fijiensis. In the present study, the genetic diversity of 22 M. fijiensis isolates was assessed using simple sequence repeats (SSR) markers, and their virulence was determined following inoculation on three different banana tree cultivars. All 22 isolates caused symptoms of the disease in the Maçã and Prata Comum cultivars 45 days after inoculation, and at least two virulence groups were identified for the Maçã and Prata Comum cultivars. For the D’Angola cultivars, two virulence groups were observed only after 60 days post-inoculation, and three of the isolates were not virulent. Using SSR markers, the isolates from two different regions of Brazil were placed into two genetic groups, both genetically distant from the Mf 138 isolate collected in Leticia, Colombia. There was no evidence of correlation between the virulence groups and the genetic diversity groups. These results demonstrate variability in virulence between isolates as measured by the severity of black sigatoka in the analyzed cultivars. © FUNPEC-RP.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.4238/gmr.15027797
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