@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref14886,
author = {Rishi Ram Burlakoti and Shaukat Ali and Gary Allen Secor and Stephen Michael Neate and Marcia Powell McMullen and Tika Bahadur Adhikari},
title = {Genetic relationships among populations of Gibberella zeae from barley, wheat, potato and sugar beet in the Upper Midwest of the United States},
year = {2008},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Phytopathology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Gibberella zeae, a causal agent of Fusarium head blight (FHB) in wheat and barley, is one of the most economically harmful pathogens of cereals in the United States. In recent years, the known host range of G. zeae has also expanded to non-cereal crops. However, there is a lack of information on the population genetic structure of G. zeae associated with non-cereal crops and across wheat cultivars. To test the hypothesis that G. zeae populations sampled from barley, wheat, potato, and sugar beet in the Upper Midwest of the United States are not mixtures of species or G. zeae clades, we analyzed sequence data of G. zeae, and confirmed that all populations studied were present in the same clade of G. zeae. Ten variable number tandem repeat (VNTR) markers were used to determine the genetic structure of G. zeae from the four crop populations. To examine the effect of wheat cultivars on the pathogen populations, 227 strains were sampled from 10 subpopulations according to wheat cultivar types. VNTR markers were used to analyze the genetic structure of these subpopulations. In all populations, gene (H = 0.453 to 0.612) and genotype diversity (GD = > 0.984) were high. There was little or no indication of linkage disequilibrium (r?d) in all G. zeae populations and subpopulations. In addition, high gene flow (Nm) values were observed between cereal and non-cereal populations (Nm = 10.69) and between FHB resistant and susceptible wheat cultivar subpopulations (Nm = 16.072), suggesting low population differentiation of G. zeae in this region. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) also revealed high genetic variation (> 80%) among individuals within populations and subpopulations. However, low genetic variation (< 5%) was observed between cereal and non-cereal populations and between resistant and susceptible wheat subpopulations. Overall, these results suggest that the populations or subpopulations are likely a single large population of G. zeae affecting crops in the Upper Midwest of the United States.}
}
Citation title: "Genetic relationships among populations of Gibberella zeae from barley, wheat, potato and sugar beet in the Upper Midwest of the United States".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S2077
(Status: Published).