| Literature DB >> 20198138 |
J H C Woudenberg1, M M Aveskamp, J de Gruyter, A G Spiers, P W Crous.
Abstract
The fungal pathogen Phoma clematidina is used as a biological agent to control the invasive plant species Clematis vitalba in New Zealand. Research conducted on P. clematidina as a potential biocontrol agent against C. vitalba, led to the discovery of two perithecial-forming strains. To assess the diversity of P. clematidina and to clarify the teleomorph-anamorph relationship, phylogenetic analyses of 18 P. clematidina strains, reference strains representing the Phoma sections in the Didymellaceae and strains of related species associated with Clematis were conducted. Partial sequences of the ITS1, ITS2 and 5.8S rRNA gene, the ss-tubulin gene and 28S rRNA gene were used to clarify intra- and inter-species relationships. These analyses revealed that P. clematidina resolves into three well-supported clades which appear to be linked to differences in host specificity. Based on these findings, Didymella clematidis is newly described and the descriptions of P. clematidina and D. vitalbina are amended.Entities:
Keywords: Ascochyta vitalbae; Clematis; DNA phylogeny; Didymella clematidis; Didymella vitalbina; ITS; LSU; taxonomy; ß-tubulin
Year: 2009 PMID: 20198138 PMCID: PMC2789541 DOI: 10.3767/003158509X427808
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Persoonia ISSN: 0031-5850 Impact factor: 11.051
Isolates included in the phylogenetic analyses.
| Species | Accession no.
| Host | Origin | GenBank no. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITS | TUB | LSU | ||||
| CBS 507.63, PD 07/03486747 | Netherlands | FJ515606 | FJ515624 | FJ515647 | ||
| PD 95/1958 | Netherlands | FJ515607 | FJ515625 | FJ515648 | ||
| CBS 454.64 | France | FJ515605 | FJ515623 | FJ515646 | ||
| CBS 201.49 | Netherlands | FJ426991 | FJ427102 | FJ515628 | ||
| CBS 195.64 | Netherlands | FJ426990 | FJ427101 | FJ515629 | ||
| CBS 102.66 | England | FJ426988 | FJ427099 | FJ515630 | ||
| CBS 520.66, PD 64/657 | Netherlands | FJ426992 | FJ427103 | FJ515631 | ||
| CBS 108.79, PD 78/522 | Netherlands | FJ426989 | FJ427100 | FJ515632 | ||
| CBS 911.87 | Germany | FJ515592 | FJ515610 | FJ515633 | ||
| CBS 123705, PD 97/13460.1, ICMP 13664 | USA | FJ515593 | FJ515611 | FJ515634 | ||
| CBS 123706, PD 08/04373904.5 | Netherlands | FJ515594 | FJ515612 | FJ515635 | ||
| CBS 123707, PD 97/13460.2, ICMP 13663 | Switzerland | FJ515595 | FJ515613 | FJ515636 | ||
| PD 75/294 | Unknown | FJ515596 | FJ515614 | FJ515637 | ||
| PD 80/683 | Netherlands | FJ515597 | FJ515615 | FJ515638 | ||
| PD 91/1865 | Netherlands | FJ515598 | FJ515616 | FJ515639 | ||
| PD 95/895 | Netherlands | FJ515599 | FJ515617 | FJ515640 | ||
| PD 97/12061 | Netherlands | FJ515600 | FJ515618 | FJ515641 | ||
| PD 97/12062 | Netherlands | FJ515601 | FJ515619 | FJ515642 | ||
| PD 99/2069 | England | FJ515602 | FJ515620 | FJ515643 | ||
| PD 08/04373904.2B | Netherlands | FJ515603 | FJ515621 | FJ515644 | ||
| PD 08/04417700.3 | Netherlands | FJ515604 | FJ515622 | FJ515645 | ||
| CBS 268.92, PD 75/3 | Netherlands | FJ515608 | FJ515626 | EU754180 | ||
| CBS 431.74, PD 74/2447 | Netherlands | FJ427001 | FJ427112 | EU754183 | ||
| CBS 114.96, PD 94/888 | Netherlands | FJ515609 | FJ515627 | FJ515649 | ||
| CBS 528.66, PD 63/590 | Netherlands | FJ427013 | FJ427124 | EU754184 | ||
| CBS 615.75, PD 73/665, ATCC 2499, IMI 199779 | Netherlands | FJ427022 | FJ427133 | EU754186 | ||
| CBS 588.69 | USA | FJ427086 | FJ427190 | EU754192 | ||
1ATCC: American Type Culture Collection, Virginia, USA; CBS: CBS Fungal Biodiversity Centre, Utrecht, The Netherlands; ICMP: International Collection of Micro-organisms from Plants, Auckland, New Zealand; IMI: International Mycological Institute, CABI-Bioscience, Egham, United Kingdom; PD: Dutch Plant Protection Service, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Fig. 1Parsimony tree obtained from a heuristic search with 100 random taxon additions of the combined ITS, BT and LSU sequences alignment. Scale bar indicates 1 change and bootstrap support values from 1 000 replicates are shown in percentages at the nodes.
Fig. 2Didymella vitalbina (CBS 123707) a. Colony on OA after 14 d; b. colony on MEA after 14 d; c. longitudinal section through a perithecium; d. ascus; e. ascospores; f. pycnidial wall with conidiogenous cells; g. pycnidia; h. longitudinal section through a pycnidium; i. conidia. — Scale bars: c, h = 50 μm; d, f = 5 μm; e, i = 10 μm; g = 100 μm.
Fig. 3Didymella clematidis (CBS 123705). a. Colony on OA after 14 d; b. colony on MEA after 14 d; c. perithecium with asci; d, e. asci with ascospores; f. pycnidia; g. longitudinal section through a pycnidium; h. pycnidial wall with conidiogenous cells; i. conidia. — Scale bars: c, f = 100 μm; d, e, h, i = 10 μm; g = 50 μm.