Molecular Ecology Notes (2006) 6, 379–381

doi: 10.1111/j.1471-8286.2005.01240.x

PRIMER NOTE

Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Microsatellite DNA markers for Plasmopara viticola, the causal agent of downy mildew of grapes F . D E L M O T T E ,* W . J . C H E N ,* S . R I C H A R D - C E R V E R A ,* C . G R E I F ,† D . P A P U R A ,* X . G I R E S S E ,* G . M O N D O R - G E N S O N ‡ and M . F . C O R I O - C O S T E T * *UMR Santé Végétale 1065 (INRA-ENITA), Centre de Recherches INRA Bordeaux Aquitaine, BP 81, 33883 Villenave d’Ornon cedex, France, †UMR Santé de la vigne et qualité du vin (INRA-ULP), Centre de Recherches INRA de Colmar, 28 rue de Herrlisheim, BP 507, 68021 Colmar cedex, France, ‡CBGP, Campus International de Baillarguet, CS 30016, 34988 Montferrier-sur-Lez cedex, France

Abstract Microsatellite loci were isolated from Plasmopara viticola (Oomycetes), the causal agent of downy mildew of grape, one of the most damaging fungal diseases of grapevine worldwide. Seven polymorphic loci were obtained from an enriched partial genomic library. A low genetic diversity was observed at all loci, with a mean observed allele number of 3.75 and an observed heterozygosity ranging from 0.074 to 0.547. Cross-amplification tests on three closely related taxa indicated that two loci could be used in other Oomycetes species. These microsatellite loci were proved to be useful for population genetic analysis. Keywords: enriched library, grape downy mildew, microsatellite, Plasmopara viticola Received 15 October 2005; revision accepted 4 November 2005

Grape downy mildew is one of the most damaging fungal diseases of grapevine (Vitis spp.) worldwide. It is caused by the heterotallic diploid Plasmopara viticola (Berk. & Curt. ex. de Bary), a biotrofic Oomycetes (Stramenopiles) native of North America. In the late 1870s, P. viticola was accidentally introduced to Europe, probably when American vine stocks resistant to grape phylloxera (Daktulosphaira vitifoliae) were used to graft the European varieties (ViennotBourgin 1949). The solution to control this devastating pathogen was found by Alexis Millardet who discovered in 1882 the prophylactic effect of lime and copper and developed the ‘Bordeaux mixture’, which became the first successful fungicide to be used in vineyards. Today, grape downy mildew control in vineyards is ensured by effective fungicide spray programme. However, the control of grape downy mildew by chemicals has led to fungicide resistance development in P. viticola populations. Managing fungicide resistance, i.e. controlling the occurrence and the spread of resistant strains in vineyards, requires a good knowledge of population genetics of the pathogen (reproductive mode, gene flow, effective population size). Gobbin et al. (2003a, b, 2005) have carried out the first genetic study on P. viticola using four microsatellite markers. However, these studies Correspondence: F. Delmotte, Fax: [email protected] © 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd

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only assessed the genetic structure at the very fine scale (vineyard) and three of the markers used either presented low polymorphism or unclear banding pattern. In this context, we present the results of a new genomic library enriched for microsatellites on P. viticola. Genomic DNA was extracted from fresh sporangia following Sambrook et al. (1989) and digested with RsaI restriction enzyme. A 500–900-bp fraction of the digested DNA was selected on agarose gel, purified and ligated to Rsa linkers. The enrichment procedure followed the protocol from Kijas et al. (1994) based on streptavidin-coated magnetic particles (Magnesphere, Promega) with slight modifications. A 5′-biotinylated (CT)10 and (GT)10 oligonucleotide were used as probes. The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products were purified and ligated into pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega), and the plasmid transformed into Escherichia coli supercompetent cells (XL1 blue, Stratagene). In total for both motives (CT and GT), 8714 recombinant clones were cultured onto LB agar/ampicillin Petri dishes at 37 °C overnight. Individual E. coli colonies were transferred to a positively charged Hybond-N+ membrane (Amersham). DNA was fixed on the membrane by baking at 80 °C for an hour. Positive colonies were identified by hybridization with (CT)10 and (GT)10 probes labelled with digoxigenin using the DIG Nucleic Acid Detection Kit (Boehringer Manheim). A total of 389 positive clones were

380 P R I M E R N O T E Table 1 Primer sequences of seven variable microsatellite loci in Plasmopara viticola. Ni, number of individual; Na, number of alleles; HO, observed heterozygosity; HE, expected heterozygosity. The forward primers were labelled with Beckman dyes D2 (Pv13, Pv16), D3 (Pv14, Pv39) and D4 (Pv7, Pv17, Pv31)

Locus

GenBank Accession no.

Pv7

DQ217575

Pv13

DQ217576

Pv14

DQ217577

Pv16

DQ217578

Pv17

DQ217579

Pv31

DQ217580

Pv39

DQ217581

Plasmopara halstedii Bremia lactucae Phytophthora infestans

Primer sequence (5’−3’)

Repeat motif

Ta (°C)

Size range (bp)

Ni

Na

HE

HO

L: TCTTCCGAAAAGGGACGTAA R: GCGTCACTGCATCTACGAAA L: CGATGAAGTGGACCCTCATT R: CCGGTAGTCAATTGCACCTT L: CAGAAACGCACAAGGTCTGA R: AATTGCATACTGCAGCAACG L: TAAAAATATGGTGGCGTCAG R: CCAGCAGTCTCCGTCTCATCAG L: CAGAGTCGAACAAGTACATTG R: CTTTGTCGCCTTCTAACAAC L: TCCCCATGCTGAAGAGTTTC R: TTCTTTCTAAGGCCGTGTGG L: ACGCATGGCGAACACGTAAG R: CAGACGGGAAGAAGTTGCTC

(TG)7

60

289–297

42

5

0.471

0.223

(TG)8

61

214–220

91

4

0.510

0.195

(TG)8

65

120–128

75

5

0.677

0.547

(TGC)2TGT(TGC)3

57

248–251

60

2

0.494

0.460

(TC)12

59

160–172

72

6

0.543

0.462

(CA)9

60

241–247

14

4

0.592

0.143

(CA)6

61

174–176

54

2

0.209

0.190

Pv7

Pv13

Pv14

Pv16

Pv17

Pv31

Pv39

— — —

— — —

124/126 124/126 124/126

248/251 243/243 248/248

— — —

— — —

171/196 179/192 —

picked and stored in plates containing glycerol at −80 °C. One hundred and ninety-two of them were sequenced, and we obtained 181 sequences, of which 160 containing repeated units. Redundant clones were eliminated leading to a set of 58 unique sequences. For 40 sequences, pairs of primers were successfully designed using the software primer 3 (Rozen & Skaletsky 2000). PCRs were carried out in 15 µL of reaction mixture containing 1.5 µL 10× buffer, 0.45 µL 25 mm MgCl2, 0.2 µL 10 mm dNTPs, 0.2 U of Taq Silverstar DNA polymerase (Eurogentec), 0.2 µL of 10 µm of a dyelabelled forward primer and an unlabelled reverse primer. Amplifications were performed on a 9700 thermocycler (PE Applied Biosystems). After an initial denaturing step of 2 min at 94 °C, 35 cycles were performed, each consisting of 30 s at 95 °C, 30 s at the appropriate annealing temperature (Table 1) and 30 s at 72 °C. A final extension step was performed at 72 °C for 2 min. Among 40 loci tested, 32 either gave nonreproducible amplifications, showed multiband patterns or amplified the host plant (Vitis vinifera). Finally, seven loci specific to downy mildew and giving clear amplifications were chosen for population analysis (Table 1). PCR products were sized on a Beckman Coulter Ceq8000 automated sequencer using the manufacturer’s fragment detection chemistry. The seven loci were tested on 150 individuals of P. viticola sampled at a large geographical scale in European (N = 100)

Table 2 Cross-amplification in three closely related plant-pathogens species (Oomycetes): Plasmopara halstedii, Bremia lactucae and Phytophthora infestans. Unsuccessful amplifications are noted as —. When we obtained amplification products, we presented the size of both alleles

and American vineyards (N = 50). They showed a low level of variability with a number of alleles ranging from one to six (mean = 3.75), an averaged observed heterozygosity ranging from 0.143 to 0.547, and an expected heterozygosity ranging from 0.209 to 0.677. Significant heterozygosity deficit was observed at Pv7, Pv13, Pv17 and Pv31 resulting from the reduced polymorphism at these loci in European populations, suggesting a strong bottleneck during the introduction of P. viticola in Europe. There were no significant deviations from linkage equilibrium between any pair of loci. The utility of these primers for closely related species was tested for the same PCR and electrophoresis conditions on three related Oomycetes species: Plasmopara halstedii, Phytophtora infestans and Bremia Lactucae. We obtained PCR products for Pv14, Pv16 and Pv39 (Table 2). Finally, microsatellites isolation from P. viticola proved to be difficult with a density of nonredundant positive clones of 1.6%. Furthermore, the microsatellite sequences were often short and yielded low variable markers.

Acknowledgements This work was supported by the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique and by the Région Aquitaine (n°5706) and ITV Bordeaux. We thank Davide Gobbin for providing us with samples collected in the USA, Cyril Dutech for technical support and JeanYves Rasplus for scientific guidance. © 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Molecular Ecology Notes, 6, 379–381

P R I M E R N O T E 381

References Gobbin D, Pertot I, Gessler C (2003a) Identification of microsatellite markers for Plasmopara viticola and establishment of high throughput method for SSR analysis. European Journal of Plant Pathology, 109, 153–164. Gobbin D, Pertot I, Gessler C (2003b) Genetic structure of a Plasmopara viticola population in an isolated Italian mountain vineyard. Journal of Phytopathology, 151, 636–646. Gobbin D, Jermini M, Loskill B, Pertot I, Raynal M, Gessler C (2005) Importance of secondary inoculum of Plasmopara viticola to epidemics of grapevine downy mildew. Plant Pathology, 54, 522–534.

© 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd, Molecular Ecology Notes, 6, 379–381

Kijas JMH, Fowler JCS, Garbett CA, Thomas MR (1994) Enrichment of microsatellites from citrus genome using biotinylated oligonucleotide sequences bound to streptavidin-coated magnetic particules. BioTechniques, 16, 657–662. Rozen S, Skaletsky H (2000) primer 3 on the WWW for general users and for biologist programmers. In: Bioinformatics Methods and Protocols: Methods in Molecular Biology (eds Krawetz S, Misener S), pp. 365–386. Humana Press, Totowa, New Jersey. Sambrook J, Fritsch EF, Maniatis T (1989) Molecular Cloning: a Laboratory Manual. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, New York. Viennot-Bourgin G (1949) Les Champignons Parasites Des Plantes Cultivées. (Masson & Cie, eds), Paris.

Microsatellite DNA markers for Plasmopara viticola, the ...

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