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Origin of a new Phytophthora pathogen through interspecific hybridization
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Communicated by Ellis B. Cowling, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC (received for review April 26, 1998)

Abstract
Plant disease epidemics resulting from introductions of exotic fungal plant pathogens are a well known phenomenon. An associated risk—that accelerated pathogen evolution may be occurring as a consequence of genetic exchange between introduced, or introduced and resident, fungal pathogens—is largely unrecognized. This is, in part, because examples of natural, interspecific hybridization in fungi are very rare. Potential evolutionary developments range from the acquisition of new host specificities to emergence of entirely new pathogen taxa. We present evidence from cytological behavior, additive nucleotide bases in repetitive internal transcribed spacer regions of the rRNA-encoding DNA (rDNA), and amplified fragment length polymorphisms of total DNA that a new, aggressive Phytophthora pathogen of alder trees in Europe comprises a range of heteroploid-interspecific hybrids involving a Phytophthora cambivora-like species and an unknown taxon similar to Phytophthora fragariae. The hybrids’ marked developmental instabilities, unusual morphological variability, and evidence for recombination in their internal transcribed spacer profiles indicates that they are of recent origin and that their evolution is continuing. The likelihood of such evolutionary events may be increasing as world trade in plants intensifies. However, routine diagnostic procedures currently in use are insufficiently sensitive to allow their detection.
Footnotes
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↵† To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: c.brasier{at}forestry.gov.uk.
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Data deposition: The sequences reported in this paper have been deposited in the GenBank database (accession nos. AF13966, AF13967, AF13968, AF13969, and AF13970).
ABBREVIATIONS
- ITS,
- internal transcribed spacer;
- AFLP,
- amplified fragment length polymorphism;
- rDNA,
- rRNA-encoding DNA.
- Received April 26, 1998.
- Accepted March 2, 1999.
- Copyright © 1999, The National Academy of Sciences