Plasmodiophora brassicae, which causes clubroot of Brassica crops, persists in soil as long-lived resting spores. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) analysis is often used to quantify resting spores but does not distinguish between DNA of viable and nonviable spores. The impact of pretreating spores with propidium monoazide (PMA), which inhibits amplification of DNA from nonviable microorganisms, was assessed in several experiments. Spore suspensions from immature and mature clubs were heat treated; then, PMA-PCR analyses and bioassays were performed to assess spore viability. Prior to heat treatment, assessments comparing PMA-PCR to qPCR for mature spores were similar, indicating that most of these spores were viable. However, only a small proportion (<26%) of immature spores were amplified in PMA-PCR. Bioassays demonstrated that clubroot severity was much higher in plants inoculated with mature spores than with immature spores. Heat treatment produced little or no change in estimates of mature spores from qPCR but spore estimates from PMA-PCR and clubroot severity in bioassays were both substantially reduced. Estimates of spore concentration with PMA-PCR were less consistent for immature spores. To facilitate use of PMA-PCR on infested soil, a protocol for extracting spores from soil was developed that provided higher extraction efficiency than the standard methods.
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