| Literature DB >> 33203383 |
Saurav Das1, T Plyler-Harveson1, Dipak K Santra2, Bijesh Maharjan1, Kathy A Nielson1, Robert M Harveson1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Root and stem rot caused by Rhizoctonia solani is a serious fungal disease of sugar beet and dry bean production in Nebraska. Rhizoctonia root rot and crown rot in sugar beet and dry bean have reduced the yield significantly and has also created problems in storage. The objective of this study was to analyze morpho-genetic diversity of 38 Rhizoctonia solani isolates from sugar beet and dry bean fields in western Nebraska collected over 10 years. Morphological features and ISSR-based DNA markers were used to study the morphogenetic diversity.Entities:
Keywords: DNA marker; Dry bean; Nebraska; Rhizoctonia solani; Sugar beet; USA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33203383 PMCID: PMC7672822 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-020-02026-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Fig. 1a Dry bean root rot (b) Sugar beet root rot (c) PDA culture plate (d) microscopic hyphal structure
Details of 41 Rhizoctonia solani isolates (38 test isolates and three control isolates with known AG group) with source, origin, year of isolation and morphological attributes
| GenBank Accession number of the ITS-rDNA | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | DB | Box Butte | Nebraska | Light tan, sclerotia throughout agar | MT950064 | |
| 2002 | DB | Box Butte | Nebraska | Brown | MT950066 | |
| 2003 | DB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Tan | MT950071 | |
| 2004 | DB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Light tan, aerial hyphae | MT950070 | |
| 2005 | DB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Brown | MT950067 | |
| 2006 | DB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Light brown | MT950077 | |
| 2007 | DB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Light brown | MT950078 | |
| 2008 | DB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Light brown | MT950079 | |
| 2009 | DB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Brown | MT950080 | |
| 2000 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Dark tan, aerial hyphae, light brown sclerotia | MT950081 | |
| 2001 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Tan, aerial hyphae | MT950082 | |
| 2001 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Smooth, cream colored | MT950074 | |
| 2001 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Dark tan | MT950083 | |
| 2001 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Light tan, aerial hyphae | MT950069 | |
| 2002 | SB | Morrill | Nebraska | Dark tan, aerial hyphae | MT950085 | |
| 2002 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Tan, sclerotia throughout agar, flat | MT950086 | |
| 2002 | SB | Colorado | Colorado | Light tan, aerial hyphae | MT950063 | |
| 2003 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Tan, sclerotia throughout agar, flat | MT950087 | |
| 2003 | SB | Box Butte | Nebraska | Dark tan, aerial hyphae | MT950089 | |
| 2003 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Smooth, cream-colored, brown sclerotia | MT950090 | |
| 2004 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Tan, sclerotia throughout agar, flat | MT950091 | |
| 2004 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Cream colored, aerial hyphae, brown sclerotia | MT950068 | |
| 2004 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Smooth, light tan, aerial hyphae | MT950092 | |
| 2005 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Brown, aerial hyphae | MT950093 | |
| 2005 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Brown, aerial hyphae, sclerotia | MT950094 | |
| 2006 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Light tan, smooth | MT950076 | |
| 2006 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Dark tan, sclerotia | MT950095 | |
| 2006 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Dark tan, aerial hyphae, brown sclerotia | MT950073 | |
| 2007 | SB | Box Butte | Nebraska | Light tan, sclerotia, aerial hyphae | MT950096 | |
| 2007 | SB | Box Butte | Nebraska | Light tan, sclerotia, aerial hyphae, brown sclerotia | MT950065 | |
| 2007 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Dark tan, sclerotia | MT950063 | |
| 2008 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Dark tan, aerial hyphae | MT950098 | |
| 2008 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Cream colored | MT950088 | |
| 2008 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Brown, aerial hyphae | MT950099 | |
| 2009 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Dark tan, aerial hyphae | MT950075 | |
| 2009 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Brown, aerial hyphae, sclerotia | MT950100 | |
| 2009 | SB | Scotts Bluff | Nebraska | Dark tan, aerial hyphae | MT950101 | |
| 2010 | SB | Wyoming | Wyoming | Dark tan, sclerotia | MT950102 | |
| Unknown | SB | Imperial | Nebraska | AG group 2–2, ISG-IIIB | MT950103 | |
| Unknown | SB | Swink | Colorado | AG group 4 | MT950084 | |
| Unknown | SB | Montana | Montana | AG group 2–2, ISG-IV | MT950072 |
aSB Sugar beet, DB Dry bean, SBC Sugar beet control strain
Fig. 2Correlation of the isolates based on their morphological characteristics. The isolates showed crop specific crop correlation. Sugar beet isolates were correlated with sugar beets and dry beans were correlated with dry beans with one exception. Correlation between sugar beets was highlighted with green, orange shades which define correlation among sugarbeet and dry bean isolates respectively. Blue shades represent inter-correlation between the sugarbeet and dry bean isolates
Fig. 3DNA marker profiles of Rhizoctonia solani isolates from sugar beets and dry beans with ISSR primer UBC809. Sugar beet and dry bean isolates are designated by RZ_SB and RZ_DB followed by a number
List of 19 ISSR markers used for the study
| ISSR primer name | Sequence (5′-3′) | Marker size (bp) | Number of polymorphic markers |
|---|---|---|---|
| UBC808 | AGAGAGAGAGAGAGAGC | 400–2000 | 27 |
| UBC809 | AGAGAGAGAGAGAGAGG | 200–2000 | 26 |
| UBC811 | GAGAGAGAGAGAGAGAC | 400–3000 | 16 |
| UBC812 | GAGAGAGAGAGAGAGAA | 300–2000 | 25 |
| UBC816 | CACACACACACACACAT | 400–2000 | 15 |
| UBC818 | CACACACACACACACAG | 300–2000 | 18 |
| UBC821 | GTGTGTGTGTGTGTGTT | 400–3000 | 17 |
| UBC828 | TGTGTGTGTGTGTGTGA | 400–3000 | 23 |
| UBC835 | AGAGAGAGAGAGAGAGYC | 200–3000 | 24 |
| UBC842 | GAGAGAGAGAGAGAGAYG | 100–1500 | 21 |
| UBC855 | ACACACACACACACACYT | 300–2000 | 19 |
| UBC856 | ACACACACACACACACYA | 400–3000 | 17 |
| UBC857 | ACACACACACACACACYG | 300–2000 | 15 |
| UBC864 | ATGATGATGATGATGATG | 300–2000 | 19 |
| UBC880 | GGAGAGGAGAGGAGA | 200–2000 | 23 |
| UBC884 | HBHAGAGAGAGAGAGAG | 200–3000 | 22 |
| UBC888 | BDBCACACACACACACA | 200–2000 | 20 |
| UBC889 | DBDACACACACACACAC | 200–3000 | 28 |
| UBC890 | VHVGTGTGTGTGTGTGT | 300–2000 | 21 |
Allele diversity within the population
| Pop | N | Na | Ne | I | He | uHe | %P | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8.000 | 0.980 | 1.269 | 0.240 | 0.159 | 0.169 | 48.35 | ||
| 0.000 | 0.050 | 0.018 | 0.014 | 0.010 | 0.010 | |||
| 30.000 | 1.858 | 1.249 | 0.280 | 0.167 | 0.170 | 92.88 | ||
| 0.000 | 0.026 | 0.014 | 0.010 | 0.008 | 0.008 | |||
| 3.000 | 0.891 | 1.259 | 0.235 | 0.156 | 0.187 | 43.26 | ||
| 0.000 | 0.050 | 0.017 | 0.014 | 0.009 | 0.011 |
*Na = No. of Different Alleles; Ne = No. of Effective Alleles = 1 / (p2 + q2); I = Shannon’s Information Index = −1* (p * Ln (p) + q * Ln(q)); He = Expected Heterozygosity = 2 * p * q; uHe = Unbiased Expected Heterozygosity = (2 N / (2 N-1)) * He [for Diploid Binary data and assuming Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium, q = (1 - Band Freq.)0.5 and p = 1 – q]
Fig. 4Dendrogram derived from the combined analysis of 19 ISSR primers for 41 Rhizoctonia solani with UPGMA method. In the figure the values are represented as (%); where au = approximately unbiased p-value (red colored), bp = bootstrap probability (bootstrap value = 1000) (green colored) and #edge = number of the sub clusters (39 total clades) (yellow colored). Clusters with Au larger than 95% are strongly supported by the data. Clades (#clade number or edge#) were grouped based on the bootstrap identity and their characteristics. Blue highlighted clades are with high bootstrap identity (≥ 80%) and statistically significant (≥ 95%). Blue highlighted (#3, #7, #22, #24) clades are with high bootstrap identity (≥ 80%) and statistically significant (≥ 95%). Organge color highlighted clade is with high bootstrap value but statistically non-significant (#13)
Hierarchical distribution of genetic diversity among the population of R. solani from sugar beet and dry beans
| Source | df | SS | MS | Estimated Variation | % of variation | ΦPTa | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 219.93 | 109.97 | 7.29 | 13% | 0.14 | < 0.023 | |
| 38 | 1787.53 | 47.04 | 47.04 | 87% | |||
| 40 | 2007.46 | 54.33 | 100% |
aΦPT = AP / (WP + AP) = AP / TOT (Key: AP = Est. Var. Among Pops, WP = Est. Var. Within Pops)
Fig. 5The evolutionary history of the 41 isolates based on ITS-rDNA sequences was inferred using the Neighbor-Joining method. The optimal tree with the sum of branch length = 1.62 is shown. The percentage of replicate trees in which the associated taxa clustered together in the bootstrap test (1000 replicates) are shown next to the branches (next to the branches). The evolutionary distances were computed using the Jukes-Cantor method and are in the units of the number of base substitutions per site
Fig. 6Location-based distribution of the R. solani isolates based on marker data