AI Article Synopsis

  • - Alternaria alternata is a fungal species that can act as both a plant pathogen and an endophyte, enhancing plant growth while studying its genetic diversity sheds light on its evolution with host plants.
  • - Research involved examining genetic variation in A. alternata from different plant hosts using ten ISSR primers, yielding 65 polymorphic bands and revealing higher genetic diversity in isolates from Gundelia tournefortii compared to Tamarix ramosissima.
  • - Results indicated significant genetic differentiation among A. alternata populations (72% within populations), suggesting strong genetic structure and potential factors like sexual reproduction or mitotic recombination influencing this diversity.

Article Abstract

Alternaria alternata is a significant fungal species that can function as both an endophytic fungus and a pathogen in various plant tissues. Unlike pathogenic fungi, endophytic fungi enhance the growth of host plants through different mechanisms. Studying the genetic diversity of endophytic fungi can provide insights into their co-evolution with plants. In this research, the genetic diversity of A. alternata from different hosts was examined using ten pairs of ISSR primers. Seven of the ten primers generated scorable polymorphic bands (total of 65 bands with an average of 9.2 bands per primer) for molecular analysis. Genetic diversity parameters revealed that isolates from Gundelia tournefortii exhibited the highest genetic diversity (Na, Ne, I, and He values of 1.55, 1.45, 0.35, and 0.24, respectively), while isolates from Tamarix ramosissima showed lower diversity (Na, Ne, I, and He values of 1.18, 1.13, 0.11, and 0.07, respectively). Cluster analysis grouped the isolates into four clusters based on Jaccard similarity matrix and UPGMA method. Principal coordinate analysis (PCOA) supported the cluster analysis findings. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) indicated a high level of genetic differentiation within populations (72 %), with only 28 % of diversity between populations. The genetic structure assessment revealed a relatively strong genetic structure among populations, suggesting the presence of a hidden sexual cycle or mitotic recombination as factors contributing to the high genetic differentiation among A. alternata populations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.funbio.2024.11.005DOI Listing

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