Northern leaf blight, caused by Setosphaeria turcica, is a serious disease of maize in temperate and tropical environments. To examine the pathogen's population structure, we analyzed 264 isolates from four different continents with 70 random amplified polymorphic DNA markers and determined their mating types. Tropical populations (from Kenya, Mexico, and southern China) had an extremely high genotypic diversity, no or only weak gametic phase disequilibrium, and an even distribution of the two mating types, indicating frequent sexual recombination. Temperate populations (from Europe and northern China) had a much lower genotypic diversity, strong gametic phase disequilibrium, and an uneven distribution of mating types, indicating that sexual recombination has been rare. Populations in different continents were genetically isolated. They shared no haplotypes and carried several "private" alleles. The number of migrants between continents and between regions (between northern and southern China, western and central Kenya, and Europe west and east of the Alps) was estimated to be less than one per generation. Multivariate statistics suggested a greater relatedness of populations from the same continents than from different continents. Within agroecological zones, migration must be extensive. The potential within populations of S. turcica for adaptation should be regarded as very high, especially in tropical climates.
The mitochondrial (mt) genomes of rye (Secale cereale L.) lines with "normal" and cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) inducing "Pampa" cytoplasm were compared by detailed restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and Northern analyses. RFLP analyses using several heterologous mt genes as probes revealed considerable differences in the overall structure of the two mt genomes. With cob and atpA, the data indicate intragenic recombination and/or different copy numbers of these genes in the two cytoplasms. In spite of this heterogeneity at DNA level, the transcriptional patterns of nine out of ten mitochondrial genes analysed are unaffected. The exception is in the "Pampa" cytoplasm which contains an additional cob-homologous transcript. Since this transcript is strongly reduced in the presence of restorer genes, it might causally be correlated to the CMS phenotype.
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