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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Mar 1996, 1014-1020, Vol 62, No. 3
S Freeman, T Katan and E Shabi
One hundred twenty isolates of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides from avocado
(6 U.S. and 57 Israeli isolates) and almond (57 Israeli isolates) fruits
were compared by various molecular methods and a pathogenicity assay in
order to determine the genetic diversity and host specificity between and
among the different populations. DNA from eight additional U.S. almond
anthracnose isolates were also compared. PCR amplification of genomic DNA
with four primers produced uniform banding patterns for all the Israeli
almond isolates from different geographic locations in Israel. DNAs from
the U.S. almond isolates were distinct from DNAs of the Israeli isolates.
In contrast, the avocado isolates from Israel and the United States were
more diverse, with numerous arbitrarily primed-PCR phenotypes being
observed. HaeIII digestion patterns of A+T-rich DNA distinguished between
the almond and avocado isolates. Southern hybridization of the repetitive
nuclear-DNA element GcpR1 to PstI-digested genomic DNA of almond and
avocado isolates revealed no polymorphic fragments among the almond
isolates, whereas polymorphic fragments were observed among the avocado
isolates. Amplification and subsequent restriction enzyme digestion of the
internal transcribed spacer 4 and 5 regions between the small and large
nuclear subunits of DNA encoding rRNA failed to distinguish between C.
gloeosporioides isolates from a diverse host range. In artificial
inoculations, avocado isolates produced various lesions on avocado and
almond fruits, whereas the almond isolates infected both fruits at a lower
rate.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Characterization of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides isolates from avocado and almond fruits with molecular and pathogenicity tests
Department of Plant Pathology, Agricultural Research Organization, The Volcani Center, Bet Dagan, Israel.
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