Author:
Hintz W. E.,Jeng R. S.,Yang D. Q.,Hubbes M. M.,Horgen P. A.
Abstract
The natural population structure of the Dutch elm pathogen Ophiostoma ulmi was determined for isolates collected from across a Western Canadian disease front through an analysis of restriction-site polymorphisms in the ribosomal DNA repeat, length mutations in the mitochondrial genomes, and through DNA fingerprinting of the nuclear genomes using a minisatellite DNA probe. The 8.8-kbp rDNA repeat was selected from a genomic library, and restriction-site and genic maps were constructed for the nonaggressive and aggressive subgroups of O. ulmi. There were only three restriction-site differences that distinguished these two subgroups and no intrasubgroup variation was detected. All of the isolates collected from the disease front were of the aggressive subgroup and were represented by two distinct nuclear and four mitochondrial genotypes. The majority of the isolates were of a single genotype (type A nuclear DNA; type I mtDNA), indicating the presence of a single very large clone extending across much of Manitoba and into Saskatchewan.Key words: Ophiostoma ulmi, Dutch elm disease, DNA fingerprinting, population biology.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Genetics,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
37 articles.
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