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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2000, p. 5267-5272, Vol. 66, No. 12
Department of Plant Pathology, ARO, The
Volcani Center, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel
Received 5 April 2000/Accepted 18 September 2000
Anthracnose, or leaf-curl disease of anemone, caused by
Colletotrichum sp., has been reported to occur in
Australia, western Europe, and Japan. Symptoms include tissue necrosis,
corm rot, leaf crinkles, and characteristic spiral twisting of floral
peduncles. Three epidemics of the disease have been recorded in Israel:
in 1978, in 1990 to 1993, and in 1996 to 1998. We characterized 92 Colletotrichum isolates associated with anthracnose of
anemone (Anemone coronaria L.) for vegetative compatibility
(72 isolates) and for molecular genotype (92 isolates) and virulence (4 isolates). Eighty-six of the isolates represented the three epidemics
in Israel, one isolate was from Australia, and five isolates originated from western Europe. We divided these isolates into three
vegetative-compatibility groups (VCGs). One VCG (ANE-A) included all 10 isolates from the first and second epidemics, and 13 of 62 examined
isolates from the third epidemic in Israel, along with the isolate from
Australia and 4 of 5 isolates from Europe. Another VCG (ANE-F) included most of the examined isolates (49 of the 62) from the third epidemic, as well as Colletotrichum acutatum from strawberry, in
Israel. Based on PCR amplification with species-specific primers, all of the anemone isolates were identified as C. acutatum.
Anemone and strawberry isolates of the two VCGs were genotypically
similar and indistinguishable when compared by arbitrarily primed
PCR of genomic DNA. Only isolate NL-12 from The Netherlands, confirmed as C. acutatum but not compatible with either VCG, had a
distinct genotype; this isolate represents a third VCG of C. acutatum. Isolates from anemone and strawberry could infect both
plant species in artificial inoculations. VCG ANE-F was recovered
from natural infections of both anemone and strawberry, but VCG
ANE-A was recovered only from anemone. This study of C. acutatum from anemone illustrates the potential of VCG analysis
to reveal distinct subspecific groups within a pathogen population
which appears to be genotypically homogeneous by molecular assays.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Characterization of Colletotrichum
acutatum Causing Anthracnose of Anemone (Anemone
coronaria L.)
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Plant Pathology, ARO, The Volcani Center, P.O. Box 6, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel. Phone: 972-3-9683537/8. Fax: 972-3-9683543. E-mail:
freeman{at}netvision.net.il.
Contribution number 516/00 from the ARO, Institute of Plant Protection.
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