Title
Host specialization not detected among isolates of the EC-1 lineage of Phytophthora infestans attacking wild and cultivated potatoes in Peru
Date Issued
01 September 2005
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Abstract
To determine whether populations of Phytophthora infestans attacking wild and cultivated potatoes in the highlands of Peru are specialized on their hosts of origin, we characterized isolates using several neutral markers, metalaxyl resistance and for aggressiveness in a detached leaf assay. One hundred and fifty-three isolates were collected from the northern and central highlands of Peru from different potato cultivars (both modern and native cultivars) and from different species of wild, tuber-bearing potatoes. All the isolates analyzed belonged to one of four clonal lineages that had been described previously in Peru: EC-1, US-1, PE-3 and PE-7. The EC-1 lineage (n = 133) was dominant and present in similar frequencies on wild and cultivated potatoes. PE-3 (n = 14) was found primarily on cultivated potatoes, with only one isolate coming from a wild host. US-1 (n = 2) and PE-7 (n = 4) were rare; all but one (PE-7) occurred on wild potatoes. Isolates from the EC-1 lineage from modern cultivars were compared in three separate detached leaf inoculation assays with EC-1 isolates from the wild potato species S. sogarandinum, S. bill-hookerii or S. huancabambense, respectively. No significant interactions between isolate type (from wild or cultivated potato) and host type (wild or cultivated) were measured for any assay. It appears that the pathogen genotypes in the EC-1 lineage indiscriminately attack both wild and cultivated tuber-bearing solanaceous hosts in Peru, and breeders should be able to select for resistance using the common EC-1 lineage. © Springer 2005.
Start page
71
End page
81
Volume
113
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Forestal
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-27944453161
Source
European Journal of Plant Pathology
ISSN of the container
09291873
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported financially by the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs. We thank S. Gamboa for her technical assistance; E. de la Torre, F. Ventura, and J. Paredes for technical support; Dr. Bodo Trognitz for providing the isolates of P. infestans of the 1997–1998 collection; R. Hijmans for providing maps of the geographic location of the isolates of P. infestans; Dr. William Fry of Cornell University, USA, for providing the probe RG57; and F. de Mendiburu for statistical analyses.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus