Thirty-three isolates of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides from various Stylosanthes species collected in Africa and Australia and associated with restricted (type A), extensive (type B) or nontypical anthracnose lesions (type C) were first compared by random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis. A phylogenetic tree was constructed based on 118 reproducible polymorphic bands generated with 16 random primers, using the upgma method. Twenty-nine isolates were grouped in two main clusters, corresponding to types A and B, within which polymorphic subgroups were partially related to geographical origin. Strong similarities were observed among isolates of distant origin. Four isolates presented profiles completely different from the A and B types and were grouped in two additional clusters. To assess the phylogenetic relationship among isolates of various types and origins at the species level, the lnternal Transcribed Spacer region (ITS 1) of the ribosomal DNA was sequenced. Type A isolates and a restricted number of type B isolates selected in the RAPD clusters showed an homology of 99·4-100%. When compared with published sequence data, the isolates that were clustered separately in the phylogenetic tree, had the exact sequence of a C. gloeosporioides strain associated with the rotting of coffee berries, or of C. kahawae, the causal agent of coffee berry disease.
A total of 264 Stylosanthes spp. plants collected from 78 Stylosanthes spp. populations in seven southern Mexican states were analysed for the presence of Colletotrichum spp. Isolates were obtained from 64 plants collected from 36 Stylosanthes populations; 198 isolates produced straight conidia, while 72 isolates produced falcate conidia. Molecular identification was performed to confirm the identity of C. gloeosporioides for the straight-spored isolates. PCR amplifications using the primer CgInt, synthesized from an ITS1 fragment specific to C. gloeosporioides, and the universal primer ITS4 generated the target fragment for 120 Mexican isolates with straight conidia. The endonucleases Ava II and Sma I were used for restriction of the entire amplified ITS1 region of these 120 isolates. The tree constructed from the restriction data grouped 118 Mexican C. gloeosporioides isolates into three clusters containing reference isolates from Africa and Australia, and generated two additional clusters for two Mexican isolates. Conidial shape and growth rate on solid medium were used as the major morphological criteria for distinguishing types A and B. On the basis of 32 other morphological characteristics, a phenogram grouped the colonies into three main clusters. These clusters were partially related to the Stylosanthes species from which they were isolated, and to the molecular groups.
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