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Original Articles

Genetic diversity of Phytophthora capsici isolates from pepper and pumpkin in Argentina

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Pages 102-107 | Received 11 May 2011, Accepted 12 Jul 2011, Published online: 20 Jan 2017
 

Abstract

Phytophthora capsici is a soilborne oomycete plant pathogen that limits pepper production worldwide. The population structure varies significantly depending on the location (e.g. Peru vs. USA) and little is known about the diversity of P. capsici in Argentina. Our objective was to assess the diversity of P. capsici in Argentina at key pepper production areas. Forty isolates were recovered 2006–2009 from pepper and one isolate from pumpkin at 11 locations. Isolates were assessed for mating type, mefenoxam sensitivity and multilocus single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotype profiles. Ten isolates with identical SNP profiles also were genotyped with amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers. All 41 isolates had the A1 mating type and were sensitive to mefenoxam. Genotypic analysis using eight polymorphic SNP markers indicated 87% of the isolates had the same multilocus genotype, which is fixed for heterozygosity at seven of the eight SNP sites. AFLP analyses confirmed these findings, and overall it appears that clonal reproduction drives the population structure of P. capsici in Argentina. The implications for breeding resistant peppers and overall disease management are discussed.

Acknowledgments

We thank Dr Joann Mudge at the National Center for Genome Resources for assistance with identifying single-copy genes in the Phytophthora capsici reference genome and Ledare Finley for assistance with reagents and culture maintenance.

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