Genetic diversity and differentiation of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum populations in sunflower

Citation

Li, Z., Wang, Y., Chen, Y., Zhang, J., Fernando, W.G.D. (2009). Genetic diversity and differentiation of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum populations in sunflower. Phytoparasitica, [online] 37(1), 77-85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12600-008-0003-6

Abstract

Ninety-six isolates of sunflower Sclerotinia sclerotiorum (Lib.) de Bary from Inner Mongolia (IM) in China, from Canada and the United Kingdom (UK) were sampled to investigate the genetic diversity and structure using Sequence-Related Amplified Polymorphism. A total of 123 polymorphic bands were obtained, ranging in size from 100 to 500 base pairs. The five populations of S. sclerotiorum isolated from the three countries showed various levels of genetic variability. The percentage of polymorphic loci varied from 30.89% in the UK population to 97.56% in the Middle IM population. The values of Shannon index (i) varied from 0.1876 in the UK population to 0.5301 in the West IM population. The heterozygosity of the five geographic populations obtained by estimating allele frequency varied from 12.91% in the UK population to 35.44% in the West IM population. The genetic identity, as indicated by the Nei unbiased identity index, ranged from 0.9744 between populations from Canada and East IM to 0.6477 between populations from West IM and UK. UPGMA cluster analysis using Nei's genetic distance gave distances ranging from 0.0259 to 0.4343. The rates of gene flow among five geographic populations ranged from 1.5406 between West IM and UK populations to 18.4149 between West IM and Middle IM populations. The four populations from West IM, Middle IM, East IM and Canada were clustered into one subgroup in which the isolates from West and Middle IM belonged to one population, whereas those from East IM and Canada essentially were another population. The isolates from the UK formed a population that was significantly distinct from other populations. © 2008 Springer Science & Business Media BV.

Publication date

2009-02-01