IPE   20454
INSTITUTO DE PATOLOGIA EXPERIMENTAL DR. MIGUEL ÁNGEL BASOMBRÍO
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
MLST reveals a separate and novel clonal group for acidovorax avenae strains causing red stripe in sugarcane from Argentina
Autor/es:
FONTANA, CECILIA ALEJANDRA; VIGNOLO, GRACIELA MARGARITA; FONTANA, PAOLA DANIELA; DI PAULI, VALENTINA; SALAZAR, SERGIO MIGUEL; TOMASINI, NICOLÁS; COCCONCELLI, PIER SANDRO
Revista:
PHYTOPATHOLOGY
Editorial:
AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
Referencias:
Año: 2019 vol. 109 p. 358 - 365
ISSN:
0031-949X
Resumen:
Acidovorax spp. cause a wide range of economically important diseases in monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants, including sugarcane, corn, rice, oat, millet, foxtail watermelon, and orchid. In Argentina, the red stripe disease of sugarcane caused by Acidovorax avenae affects 30% of the milling stems with important economic losses. To explore the genetic diversity of this bacterium associated with red stripe in Argentina, multilocus sequence typing (MLST) was applied. This study included 15 local strains isolated from four different sugarcane planting regions and selected after random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis and reference strains of A. citrulli, A. avenae, and A. oryzae to investigate their phylogenetic relationships. MLST analysis resulted in five sequence types among the sugarcane A. avenae strains which constitute a clonal complex, meaning a common and close origin. Sugarcane strains were related to A. avenae from other hosts and distant to A. citrulli. Signals of frequent recombination in several lineages of A. avenae was detected and we observed that A. oryzae is closely related to A. avenae strains. This study provides valuable data in the field of epidemiological and evolutionary investigations of novel clone of A. avenae strains causing sugarcane red stripe. The knowledge of the genetic diversity and strain-host specificity are important to select the genotypes with the best response to the red stripe disease.