| Literature DB >> 27389682 |
Daisuke Kurose1, Naruto Furuya2, Tetsuya Saeki2, Kenichi Tsuchiya2, Seiya Tsushima3, Marion K Seier4.
Abstract
The ascomycete fungus Mycosphaerella polygoni-cuspidati has been undergoing evaluation as a potential classical biological control agent for the invasive weed Fallopia japonica (Japanese knotweed), which has become troublesome in Europe and North America. In advance of the potential release of a biocontrol agent into a new environment, it is crucial to develop an effective monitoring system to enable the evaluation of agent establishment and dispersal within the target host population, as well as any potential attacks on non-target species. Therefore, a primer pair was designed for direct, rapid, and specific detection of the Japanese knotweed pathogen M. polygoni-cuspidati based on the sequences of the internal transcribed spacer regions including the 5.8S rDNA. A PCR product of approximately 298 bp was obtained only when the DNA extracted from mycelial fragments of M. polygoni-cuspidati was used. The lower limit of detection of the PCR method was 100 fg of genomic DNA. Using the specific primer pair, M. polygoni-cuspidati could be detected from both naturally and artificially infected Japanese knotweed plants. No amplification was observed for other Mycosphaerella spp. or fungal endophytes isolated from F. japonica. The designed primer pair is thus effective for the specific detection of M. polygoni-cuspidati in planta.Entities:
Keywords: Japanese knotweed; Leaf spot disease; Molecular marker; Weed biocontrol; rDNA-ITS region
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27389682 PMCID: PMC5429361 DOI: 10.1007/s12033-016-9962-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biotechnol ISSN: 1073-6085 Impact factor: 2.695
Fungal isolates used to screen the specificity of the primer
| Species | Isolate no. | Isolation source | Location of collection | PCR amplification | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITS1/ITS4 | MP-F2/MP-R1 | ||||
|
| IMI 401968 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | + |
|
| IMI 393527 |
| Kochi, Japan | + | + |
|
| IMI 401910 |
| Yamaguchi, Japan | + | + |
|
| IMI 395027 |
| Hiroshima, Japan | + | + |
|
| IMI 395028 |
| Nagasaki, Japan | + | + |
|
| IMI 401914 |
| Nagasaki, Japan | + | − |
|
| IMI 169888 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | + | − |
|
| IMI 147194 |
| United Kingdom | + | − |
|
| IMI 362252 |
| Ethiopia | + | − |
|
| IMI 190859 | Triticale | Ethiopia | + | − |
|
| IMI 147030 |
| United Kingdom | + | − |
|
| IMI 356555 |
| India | + | − |
|
| IMI 292857 |
| Papua New Guinea | + | − |
|
| FJJ24 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ193 |
| Oita, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ206 |
| Nagasaki, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ23 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ180 |
| Oita, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ39 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ29 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ64 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ69 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ252 |
| Oita, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ27 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ45 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ242 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ143 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ219 |
| Nagasaki, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ195 |
| Oita, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ267 |
| Oita, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ265 |
| Oita, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ21 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ258 |
| Oita, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ103 |
| Fukuoka, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ208 |
| Nagasaki, Japan | + | − |
|
| FJJ204 |
| Nagasaki, Japan | + | − |
IMI Genetic Resources Collection, CABI, Egham UK, FJJ Laboratory of Plant Pathology, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan
Fig. 1Disease symptoms caused by Mycosphaerella polygoni-cuspidati on Fallopia japonica. a Artificially infected leaves of F. japonica in a greenhouse. b Naturally infected leaves of F. japonica at Omura, Nagasaki, Japan
Fig. 2Specificity of PCR with the primer pair MP-F2/MP-R1 for detection of Mycosphaerella polygoni-cuspidati. Lane M—Molecular marker (100-bp DNA ladder), Lane 1—M. polygoni-cuspidati IMI 401968, Lane 2—M. polygoni-cuspidati IMI 393527, Lane 3—M. polygoni-cuspidati IMI 401910, Lane 4—M. polygoni-cuspidati IMI 395027, Lane 5—M. polygoni-cuspidati IMI 395028, Lane 6—M. shimabarensis, Lane 7—M. berkeleyi, Lane 8—M. chrysanthemi, Lane 9—M. delegatensis, Lane 10—M. graminicola, Lane 11—M. macrospora, Lane 12—M. mori, Lane 13—M. praecox, Lane 14—Alternaria alternata, Lane 15—Al. azukiae, Lane 16—Annulohypoxylon squamulosum, Lane 17—Aureobasidium pullulans, Lane 18—Bionectria ochroleuca, Lane 19—Biscogniauxia capnodes, Lane 20— M. polygoni-cuspidati IMI 395028, Lane 21—Botryosphaeria berengeriana, Lane 22—Bo. dothidea, Lane 23—Cladosporium cladosporioides, Lane 24—Colletotrichum acutatum, Lane 25—Co. crassipes, Lane 26—Co. gloeosporioides, Lane 27—Cynanchum auriculatum, Lane 28—Irpex lacteus, Lane 29—Nemania diffusa, Lane 30—Nigrospora sphaerica, Lane 31—Pestalotiopsis sydowiana, Lane 32—Pe. vismiae, Lane 33—Phoma glomerata, Lane 34—Ph. macrostoma, Lane 35—Phomopsis eucommicola, Lane 36—Xylaria hypoxylon, Lane 37—X. venosula, Lane 38—negative control (without DNA)
Fig. 3PCR sensitivity assay using the primer pair MP-F2/MP-R1 for detection of Mycosphaerella polygoni-cuspidati. Lane M—Molecular marker (100-bp DNA ladder), Lane 1—10 ng/μl, Lane 2—1 ng/μl, Lane 3—100 pg/μl, Lane 4—10 pg/μl, Lane 5—1 pg/μl, Lane 6—100 fg/μl, Lane 7—10 fg/μl, Lane 8—1 fg/μl, Lane 9—negative control (without DNA)
Fig. 4Detection of Mycosphaerella polygoni-cuspidati from artificially and naturally infected Fallopia japonica samples. Lane M—Molecular marker (100-bp DNA ladder), Lanes 1—M. polygoni-cuspidati IMI395028, Lanes 2–4—artificially infected leaf, Lanes 5–7—naturally infected leaf (asymptomatic part), Lanes 8–10—naturally infected leaf (symptomatic part), Lanes 11—negative control (healthy leaf)