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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2008, p. 6327-6332, Vol. 74, No. 20
0099-2240/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.01200-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

INRA, Institut des Sciences de la Vigne et du Vin de Bordeaux, UMR1065 Santé Végétale (INRA-ENITAB), F-33883 Villenave d'Ornon, France
Received 30 May 2008/ Accepted 11 August 2008
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Grapevine powdery mildew, which is caused by the biotrophic ascomycete Erysiphe necator (syn. Uncinula necator), provides a good model system for investigating the effects of the genetic structures of plant pathogens on plant disease epidemics. E. necator populations are structured into two genetically differentiated groups (A and B) that have been identified previously in a number of grapevine-growing countries, including France (11), Australia (14), Italy (26), and Spain (29). Délye et al. (11) suggested that group A isolates survive the winter as a resting mycelium within dormant buds, from which growth is reinitiated after budbreak, leading to the colonization of young flag shoots (30, 34); in contrast, group B isolates originate from ascospores released from overwintering cleistothecia (19). An association between flag shoot symptoms and infection with group A isolates has also been reported in other studies (1, 10, 26). However, the association between the genetic group and the overwintering strategy has been challenged by the findings in recent studies reporting that flag shoot symptoms may be caused by both groups (8, 28, 29, 32, 41).
Polymorphism in relation to E. necator aggressiveness has been poorly investigated. Recent comparisons of the degrees of aggressiveness of different E. necator genetic groups have yielded partly conflicting results: Péros et al. (31) reported that the index of infection (i.e., the proportion of sporulating lesions generated from local inoculation) was lower and that the lesion diameter was smaller for group A isolates than for group B isolates, whereas Willocquet et al. (41) found that group B isolates were more aggressive than group A isolates for certain traits (the germination ratio and infection efficiency) and that the opposite was true for other traits (the latency period, lesion diameter, and intensity of sporulation).
The frequencies of E. necator genetic groups vary considerably among vineyards, and the two groups may coexist in the same vineyard (1, 4, 7, 8, 28, 41). This finding suggests that the maintenance of a highly differentiated genetic structure in E. necator populations may result from the temporal isolation of genetic groups. This temporal pattern may result from differences in aggressiveness (i.e., quantitative pathogenicity) between isolates from different genetic groups. Therefore, this study addressed three main issues: (i) the relative proportions of A and B isolates during the course of powdery mildew epidemics, (ii) possible differences in aggressiveness traits between genetic groups of E. necator isolates, and (iii) possible changes in the aggressiveness of E. necator populations during epidemics.
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Three of the 32 vineyards containing both E. necator genetic groups were selected for subsequent investigation. These vineyards were located at Peyriac-Minervois (PYM; 43°17'49.1''N, 2°33'27.9''E), Villarzel-Cabardès (VLZ; 43°16'46.5''N, 2°27'53.7''E), and Rieux-Minervois (RXM; 43°16'28.7''N, 2°36'30.8''E). Untreated plots of seven rows of 54 vines, six rows of 47 vines, and five rows of 49 vines at PYM, VLZ, and RXM, respectively, were used for sampling and disease assessment.
Isolate collection.
Sampling was carried out in each of the three vineyards on five dates throughout the 2007 cropping season (22 May, 20 June, 10 July, 31 July, and 27 August). Forty to 55 infected leaves with single lesions were randomly collected from each field on each date, leading to a total of 720 samples. Leaves were kept abaxial face uppermost on moist filter paper in petri dishes, and the dishes were incubated at 22°C (85 microeinstein m–2 s–1, with a 12-h/12-h photoperiod).
Assessment of disease severity.
On each sampling date, the degrees of disease severity on the leaves and clusters of two canes from each of 24 vines randomly distributed throughout the untreated parts of each of the three vineyards were assessed. For each cane, the diseased leaf or cluster area was estimated visually and expressed as a percentage of the total leaf or cluster area. The mean stages of development of the same 24 vines on each sampling date were also assessed according to the BBCH (biologische Bundesanstalt, Bundessortenamt and chemical industry) scale (21).
Measurements of components of aggressiveness.
Two days after collection, the spores from each diseased leaf sample were used as the inoculum for direct point inoculation (31). In this process, an inoculating needle was used to apply 20 to 60 conidia at the center of the upper surface of an additional leaf of grapevine cultivar Carignan. These leaves were collected from 2-month-old cuttings of vines grown in greenhouses and were disinfected in a bath of calcium hypochlorite (50 g/liter) for 10 min, rinsed in sterilized water, and dried between layers of sterile filter paper. Inoculated leaves were placed onto agar medium (20 g/liter) supplemented with benzimidazole (30 mg/liter) in petri dishes, and the dishes were incubated at 22°C.
Isolates from PYM and VLZ were characterized on the basis of a set of aggressiveness traits, the aggressiveness components (the latency period, lesion diameter, number of spores per lesion, germination ratio, and infection efficiency). No data were available for isolates from RXM, because inoculations with those isolates were unsuccessful. The reasons for this failure to isolate the fungus after inoculation were unclear but may have included the effects of antagonists (see, e.g., references 15 and 27).
The latency period was determined by observing the appearance of conidia daily under a dissecting microscope. Lesion diameters were measured 11 days after inoculation by placing a transparent sheet of paper marked with 3- to 15-mm-diameter circles over each lesion. Lesion samples were cut into two equal parts 12 days after inoculation. One half of the lesion sample was washed in a vial containing 10 ml of Isoton II (saline buffer) supplemented with a drop of dispersant type IIIA, and the number of spores produced per lesion was determined with a Multisizer 3 Coulter Counter (Beckman Coulter France, Villepinte). The remaining half of the lesion sample was used to inoculate a new leaf of cultivar Carignan, by gentle rubbing against the upper side of the leaf, to determine the germination ratio and infection efficiency, as defined by Zadoks and Schein (42). Three days after inoculation, germination ratios and infection efficiencies were estimated by using the adhesive-tape method (40) and assessing 50 spores per leaf.
Molecular characterization.
The β-tubulin gene of E. necator (tub2; GenBank accession number AY074934), with a T/C single nucleotide polymorphism differentiating between groups A and B (1), was specifically amplified. The single nucleotide polymorphism creates a recognition site for the restriction endonuclease AccI, making it possible to characterize isolates as group A or B by cleaved amplified polymorphic sequence analysis (3). DNA extraction, PCR, and cleavage reactions were carried out as described previously (28).
Data analyses.
Mixes of A and B isolates were detected only at VLZ, on three sampling dates. Two separate analyses were thus performed. A first one with VLZ samples allowed the testing of the effects of the genetic group and the sampling date on aggressiveness. A second one, based on results obtained for genotype B samples from all sites and sampling dates, allowed the assessment of the effect of the sampling date on the aggressiveness of genotype B.
The degrees of aggressiveness of group A and B isolates collected from VLZ on the first three sampling dates were compared by assessing the effects of the sampling date, the genetic group, and the combination of these two factors on each aggressiveness component by using mixed models and a split-plot design, with the sampling date as the main unit fixed effect, the genetic group as a subunit fixed effect, and the isolate as a random effect. The analysis was carried out with the MIXED procedure of the SAS software (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).
Changes in the aggressiveness of genetic group B samples from PYM and VLZ during the course of the epidemics were analyzed by assessing the effects of the sampling date on each aggressiveness component by using mixed models with the sampling date as a fixed effect and the isolate as a random effect. Whenever significant effects were detected, means were compared using the Student-Newman-Keuls (SNK) test (P = 0.05).
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FIG. 1. Degrees of powdery mildew severity (means ± standard errors of the means [SEM]) on leaves and on clusters during the course of the 2007 growing season in three vineyards (VLZ, PYM, and RXM) of southern France. The diseased areas of leaves and clusters are expressed as percentages of the total leaf and cluster areas. Numbers at the top of the figure indicate the developmental stages according to the BBCH scale (21). Dates are given as month/day.
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FIG. 2. Changes during the course of the 2007 growing season in the frequencies of genetic group B isolates in E. necator populations collected from three vineyards (VLZ, PYM, and RXM) in southern France. Numbers at the top of the figure indicate the developmental stages according to the BBCH scale (21). Dates are given as month/day.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Results from mixed-model analyses assessing the effects of the sampling date, the genetic group, and the corresponding two-way interaction of these factors on the various aggressiveness components for E. necator isolates obtained from VLZ on the first three sampling datesa
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FIG. 3. Aggressiveness component values (means ± SEM) as a function of the genetic group (A or B) and sampling date for E. necator isolates collected from one French vineyard (VLZ) during the 2007 powdery mildew epidemic. Dates are given as month/day.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Mean aggressiveness component values as a function of the sampling date for E. necator B isolates collected from two vineyards (PYM and VLZ) in southern Francea
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Group B isolates may overwinter either within buds (8, 29, 32, 41) or within cleistothecia formed by sexual reproduction, whereas group A isolates probably survive the winter exclusively within buds, which become infected at the beginning of the growing season (30). From an evolutionary point of view, this difference in survival strategy between the two genetic groups should confer an advantage on group B isolates, as these isolates benefit from both clonal and sexual reproduction. The long-term maintenance of group A isolates raises questions about the competition between E. necator genetic groups for bud infection early in the season.
A comparison of life history traits determining aggressiveness between the two genetic groups showed that group A was less aggressive than group B in terms of the germination ratio and infection efficiency and that group A was more aggressive than group B in terms of the latency period, lesion diameter, and number of spores per lesion. The findings of this study show that E. necator aggressiveness traits can be classified into two independent groups: one including monocyclic variables associated with infection (the germination ratio and infection efficiency) and the second including variables associated with epidemiological processes following infection (the latency period, spore production, and lesion size). In powdery mildew epidemics, two sympatric genetic groups may adopt different ecological strategies to colonize and use the same resource. Genetic group A isolates produce large numbers of conidia with a low infection efficiency, whereas genetic group B isolates produce smaller numbers of conidia with a higher infection efficiency. From an ecological point of view, group A isolates may be considered to have a life strategy of the [r] type, whereas group B isolates have a life strategy of the [K] type (25, 33). Invaders of vacant ecological niches tend to be [r] type strategists, whereas competitors in occupied niches tend to be [K] type strategists (24). This pattern is consistent with the observations that group A isolates were active mostly at the beginning of the growing season, subsequently disappearing, and that the frequency of group B isolates increased over time.
Our results show that aggressiveness within the two genetic groups did not increase during the course of the epidemics. This result contrasts with those obtained previously for other fungal plant pathogens. Villareal and Lannou (38) and Andrivon et al. (2) showed that directional selection for increased aggressiveness takes place in Erysiphe graminis and Phytophthora infestans populations, respectively, during the epidemic stage. Some fungal plant pathogens alternate between highly aggressive life stages and life stages in which highly aggressive strains are selected against, whereas the aggressiveness of other fungal plant pathogens, such as Mycosphaerella graminicola (9) and E. necator, remains stable.
The findings of this study demonstrate the temporal isolation of genetic groups of E. necator populations but provide no explanation for the predominance of group A at the beginning of the growing season only. However, our results did show that the disappearance of group A isolates during epidemics was not associated with an effect of fungicide, as all samples were collected from untreated plots. The data for aggressiveness components showed that numerical differences between the genetic groups were small and potentially insufficient to account for the disappearance of group A isolates during epidemics. The mechanisms underlying the apparent disappearance of group A isolates may involve the effects of temperature and/or the ontogenic resistance of leaves (13, 16).
The survival strategies of group A and B isolates seem to have major consequences for subsequent disease development and severity. The degree of disease severity, both on leaves and clusters, in the vineyard in which the frequency of group B isolates increased most rapidly was higher than those in the other two vineyards, suggesting an association between the disease level and the frequencies of genetic groups at the beginning of the growing season. A similar association between the genotype frequency and the disease level was found previously for wheat take-all (22). The results presented here are based on samples from a very small number of vineyards, but Montarry et al. (28) previously observed a strong association between the levels of disease severity at the end of the growing season and the initial compositions of E. necator populations in 13 commercial vineyards. Damage was found to be greater for epidemics initiated by group B isolates. Further studies are required to confirm these findings and may lead, in the short term, to the development of new diagnostic methods based on the early assessment of E. necator genetic groups, which would be useful for integrated crop management in vineyards.
We thank C. Cabot, J. Gastou, and G. Lalaque for allowing us to use their untreated plots. We also thank F. Boyer (CA-11) for the assessment of epidemic development. We thank S. Savary, C. Robin, and D. Andrivon for very valuable comments on a draft version of this paper.
Published ahead of print on 22 August 2008. ![]()
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