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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2001, p. 354-362, Vol. 67, No. 1
Forestry and Agriculture Biotechnology
Institute1 and Department of
Genetics,2 University of Pretoria, Pretoria
0002, Republic of South Africa
Received 17 May 2000/Accepted 19 October 2000
Sphaeropsis sapinea is a fungal endophyte of
Pinus spp. that can cause disease following predisposition
of trees by biotic or abiotic stresses. Four morphotypes of S. sapinea have been described from within the natural range of the
fungus, while only one morphotype has been identified on exotic pines
in the Southern Hemisphere. The aim of this study was to develop robust
polymorphic markers that could be used in both taxonomic and population
studies. Inter-short-sequence-repeat primers containing microsatellite sequences and degenerate anchors at the 5' end were used to target microsatellite-rich areas in an S. sapinea isolate. PCR
amplification using an annealing temperature of 49°C resulted in
profiles containing 5 to 10 bands. These bands were cloned and
sequenced, and new short-sequence-repeat (SSR) primer pairs were
designed that flanked microsatellite-rich regions. Eleven polymorphic
SSR markers were tested on 40 isolates of S. sapinea
representing different morphotypes as well as on 2 isolates of the
closely related species Botryosphaeria obtusa. The putative
I morphotype was found to be identical to B. obtusa.
Otherwise, the markers clearly distinguished the remaining three
morphotypes and, furthermore, showed that the C morphotype was more
closely related to the A than the B morphotype. The B morphotype was
the most genetically diverse, and the isolates could be further divided
based on their geographic origins. Sequencing of different alleles from
each locus showed that the most polymorphic markers had mutations
within a microsatellite sequence.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.1.354-362.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Simple Sequence Repeat Markers Distinguish among
Morphotypes of Sphaeropsis sapinea
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: FABI, 74 Lunnon
St., University of Pretoria, Pretoria 0002, Republic of South Africa. Phone: 27 12 420 3858. Fax: 27 12 420 3960. E-mail:
treena.burgess{at}fabi.up.ac.za.
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