1. Cytology and genetics of sexual incompatibility inDidymella rabiei
- Author
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W. J. Kaiser and Alphus Dan Wilson
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Genetics ,Mating type ,biology ,Physiology ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Didymella rabiei ,Fungus ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,Somatic hyphae ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Sexual reproduction ,Conidium ,03 medical and health sciences ,Dothideales ,Botany ,Heterothallic ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Mating crosses in all possible combinations between 15 monoascosporic isolates ofDidymella rabiei (Ascomycotina, Dothideales), derived from diseased chickpea stems collected at a single location in Genesee, Idaho, were prepared on sterile chickpea stem pieces incubated on moist sterile filter papers in glass petri dishes for 5-6 weeks at 10 C or in nylon mesh bags placed on the soil surface outdoors to overwinter for 6 months. The discharge of large numbers of viable ascospores from mature pseudothecia forming on the chickpea stems was indication of successful matings. Pairings between sympatric isolates demonstrated that the fungus is heterothallic with a unifactorial (bipolar) homogenic mating incompatibility system. Papazian test pairings between tester strains and mating types from three locations in Idaho and Washington indi? cated the absence of complete interfertility between allopatric populations and provided strong evidence that the fungus is biallelic, lacking multiple alleles at the single mating locus. The nuclear content of so? matic and reproductive cells at all phases of the life cycle was examined using Giemsa stain. Ascospores and conidia were commonly multinucleate and ap? peared to undergo multiple mitotic divisions prior to germination. Somatic hyphae derived from ascospores and conidia were predominately uninucleate. The importance of sexual reproduction, sexual incompati? bility, and the teleomorph in the disease cycle is dis? cussed relative to environmental factors required for their occurrence and implications for disease control.
- Published
- 1995
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