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Publication no. P-2000-0705-01R
Genetics and Resistance
Environmental and Genetic Factors Influencing Self-Fertility in Phytophthora
infestans. C. D. Smart, H. Mayton, E. S. G. Mizubuti, M. R. Willmann,
and W. E. Fry. Department of Plant Pathology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
14853. Phytopathology 90:987-994. Accepted for publication 25 May 2000.
Copyright 2000 The American Phytopathological Society.
Phytophthora infestans is generally regarded as heterothallic–requiring
physical proximity of two individuals of different mating type (A1 and A2) for
oosporogenesis. Recent reports of limited selfing in young cultures of this
oomycete stimulated us to investigate factors contributing to the phenomenon.
The ability to produce oospores rapidly (within 2 weeks) in pure, single
individual cultures (self-fertility) was tested in 116 individual isolates. The
116 isolates were from geographically diverse locations (16 countries) and were
genetically diverse. Mating type and growth medium were the most prominent
factors in determining if an isolate would be self-fertile. The majority of A2
isolates (45 of 47 tested) produced oospores when grown on a 50:50 mixture of V8
and rye B medium. In contrast, the majority of A1 isolates (65 of 69 tested) did
not produce oospores on this medium. None of the 116 isolates produced oospores
when grown on rye B medium (with no V8 juice). Further tests on representative
A1 and A2 isolates revealed that oatmeal agar, tomato juice agar, and V8-juice
agar all induced the A2 mating type isolate to produce oospores but did not
induce the A1 mating type isolate to produce oospores. Calcium carbonate and pH
did not alter the self-fertile oospore production in either A1 or A2 mating type
isolates. For in vivo tests, the application of fungicide to potato or tomato
leaf tissue either before or after inoculation did not stimulate any individual
isolate (one A2 and one A1 isolate) to produce oospores in infected tissue.
However, in all of the controls for all experiments (in vivo and in
vitro), many oospores were produced rapidly if both strains grew in physical
proximity. Additional keywords: growth media, late blight.
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