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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Oct 1997, 3858-3865, Vol 63, No. 10
GA Kowalchuk, S Gerards and JW Woldendorp
Marram grass (Ammophila arenaria L.), a sand-stabilizing plant species in
coastal dune areas, is affected by a specific pathosystem thought to
include both plant-pathogenic fungi and nematodes. To study the fungal
component of this pathosystem, we developed a method for the
cultivation-independent detection and characterization of fungi infecting
plant roots based on denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of
specifically amplified DNA fragments coding for 18S rRNA (rDNA). A nested
PCR strategy was employed to amplify a 569-bp region of the 18S rRNA gene,
with the addition of a 36-bp GC clamp, from fungal isolates, from roots of
test plants infected in the laboratory, and from field samples of marram
grass roots from both healthy and degenerating stands from coastal dunes in
The Netherlands. PCR products from fungal isolates were subjected to DGGE
to examine the variation seen both between different fungal taxa and within
a single species. DGGE of the 18S rDNA fragments could resolve species
differences from fungi used in this study yet was unable to discriminate
between strains of a single species. The 18S rRNA genes from 20 isolates of
fungal species previously recovered from A. arenaria roots were cloned and
partially sequenced to aid in the interpretation of DGGE data. DGGE
patterns recovered from laboratory plants showed that this technique could
reliably identify known plant-infecting fungi. Amplification products from
field A. arenaria roots also were analyzed by DGGE, and the major bands
were excised, reamplified, sequenced, and subjected to phylogenetic
analysis. Some recovered 18S rDNA sequences allowed for phylogenetic
placement to the genus level, whereas other sequences were not closely
related to known fungal 18S rDNA sequences. The molecular data presented
here reveal fungal diversity not detected in previous culture-based
surveys.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Detection and characterization of fungal infections of Ammophila arenaria (marram grass) roots by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis of specifically amplified 18s rDNA
Department of Plant-Microorganism Interactions, Netherlands Institute of Ecology, Heteren, The Netherlands. gkowal@cto.nioo.knaw.nl
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