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Pathogenicity, Virulence, and Vegetative Compatibility Grouping of Verticillium Isolates from Spinach Seed.
- Source :
-
Plant Disease . Nov2013, Vol. 97 Issue 11, p1457-1469. 13p. - Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- In 2005, Verticillium dahliae was first reported to be pathogenic to spinach seed crops in the Pacific Northwest, with symptoms only de-veloping after initiation of the reproductive stage of plant growth, and to be prevalent on commercial spinach seed lots produced in Denmark, The Netherlands, and the United States. In this study, the genetic diver-sity, pathogenicity, and virulence were examined for a collection of isolates of Verticillium spp. from spinach as well as other hosts (alfalfa, cotton, lettuce, mint, peppermint, potato, radish, and tomato) from various countries and from different vegetative compatibility groups (VCGs). Of a total of 210 isolates of V. dahliae obtained from spinach seed produced in Denmark, the Netherlands, New Zealand, or the United States, 128 were assigned to VCG 4B (89% of 91 U.S. isolates, 86% of 42 isolates from the Netherlands, 19% of 43 Denmark isolates, and 8% of 13 New Zealand isolates), 65 to VCG 2B (92% of the New Zealand isolates, 79% of the Denmark isolates, 14% of the Netherlands isolates, and 9% of the U.S. isolates), and 3 to VCG 2A (2% of each of the Denmark and U.S. isolates, and 0% of the Netherlands and New Zealand isolates); 14 isolates could not be assigned to a VCG. Although little variation in the sequence of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of ribosomal DNA was observed among isolates within each Verticillium sp., the ITS region readily differentiated iso-lates of the species V. dahliae, V. tricorpus, and Gibellulopsis nigres-cens (formerly V. nigrescens) obtained from spinach seed. Greenhouse pathogenicity assays on spinach, cotton, lettuce, and tomato plants using isolates of V. dahliae (n = 29 to 34 isolates), V. tricorpus (n = 3), G. nigrescens (n = 2), and V. albo-atrum (n = 1) originally obtained from these hosts as well as from alfalfa, mint, peppermint, potato, and radish, revealed a wide range in virulence among the isolates. Isolates of V. tricorpus and G. nigrescens recovered from spinach seed and an isolate of V. albo-atrum from alfalfa were not pathogenic on spinach. In addition, isolates of V. dahliae from mint and peppermint were not pathogenic or only weakly virulent on the hosts evaluated. Although there was a wide range in virulence among the isolates of V. dahliae tested, all of the V. dahliae isolates caused Verticillium wilt symptoms on spinach, lettuce, tomato, and cotton. None of the isolates of V. dahl-iae showed host specificity. These results indicate that Verticillium and related species associated with spinach seed display substantial varia-bility in virulence and pathogenicity to spinach and other plants but the V. dahliae isolates were restricted to three VCGs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *VERTICILLIUM
*MICROBIAL virulence
*SPINACH
*SYMPTOMS
*PLANT reproduction
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 01912917
- Volume :
- 97
- Issue :
- 11
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Plant Disease
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 91624013
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-01-13-0016-RE