The red rot disease of Porphyra yezoensis Ueda (Rhodophyta) is caused by a parasitic fungus, Pythium sp. To facilitate the detection of this pathogen in infected thalli of P. yezoensis, polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies were prepared. Antibodies were raised against antigen prepared from an isolate of fungal hyphae obtained from red-rot infected thallus of P. yezoensis from Aichi Prefecture. Polyclonal antibody was obtained from the antisera of immunized rabbits. Monoclonal antibody was obtained from the culture supernatant of a hybridoma which had been established by cell fusion between a myeloma cell line and spleen cells of immunized mice. Hyphae were detected by means of indirect fluorescent antibody technique. Titers of polyclonal antibodies obtained were too low to recognize fungal hyphae that had penetrated the thalli of P yezoensis; however, monoclonal antibody was useful for the detection of fungi that had penetrated algal thalli. The monoclonal antibody was specific for the Pythium sp. from red-rot infected thalli of P. yezoensis from Saga (western Japan) and from Aichi Prefectures (central Japan), but was ineffective for infections from Miyagi Prefecture (northern Japan). It is evident, therefore, that Pythium sp. can give rise to immunologically distinct groups of red rot disease. Based on chemical and enzymatic treatments, the antigenic determinant appeared to localize on the sugar chains of glycoconjugates or the polysaccharides of the hyphal cell wall.
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