Assessment of genetic diversity in Thai isolates of Pyricularia grisea by random amplification of polymorphic DNA

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Assessment of genetic diversity in Thai isolates of Pyricularia grisea by random amplification of polymorphic DNA. / Sirithunya, P.; Sreewongchai, T.; Sriprakhon, S.; Toojinda, T.; Pimpisithavorn, S.; Kosawang, C.; Smitamana, P.

In: Journal of Phytopathology, Vol. 156, No. 4, 04.2008, p. 196-204.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sirithunya, P, Sreewongchai, T, Sriprakhon, S, Toojinda, T, Pimpisithavorn, S, Kosawang, C & Smitamana, P 2008, 'Assessment of genetic diversity in Thai isolates of Pyricularia grisea by random amplification of polymorphic DNA', Journal of Phytopathology, vol. 156, no. 4, pp. 196-204. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0434.2007.01341.x

APA

Sirithunya, P., Sreewongchai, T., Sriprakhon, S., Toojinda, T., Pimpisithavorn, S., Kosawang, C., & Smitamana, P. (2008). Assessment of genetic diversity in Thai isolates of Pyricularia grisea by random amplification of polymorphic DNA. Journal of Phytopathology, 156(4), 196-204. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0434.2007.01341.x

Vancouver

Sirithunya P, Sreewongchai T, Sriprakhon S, Toojinda T, Pimpisithavorn S, Kosawang C et al. Assessment of genetic diversity in Thai isolates of Pyricularia grisea by random amplification of polymorphic DNA. Journal of Phytopathology. 2008 Apr;156(4):196-204. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0434.2007.01341.x

Author

Sirithunya, P. ; Sreewongchai, T. ; Sriprakhon, S. ; Toojinda, T. ; Pimpisithavorn, S. ; Kosawang, C. ; Smitamana, P. / Assessment of genetic diversity in Thai isolates of Pyricularia grisea by random amplification of polymorphic DNA. In: Journal of Phytopathology. 2008 ; Vol. 156, No. 4. pp. 196-204.

Bibtex

@article{f469e27ed4084b23bea017c144b3e183,
title = "Assessment of genetic diversity in Thai isolates of Pyricularia grisea by random amplification of polymorphic DNA",
abstract = "One hundred and seventy-four isolates of Pyricularia grisea were collected from various hosts such as barley, rice, weed and wild rice in Thailand. Seven arbitrary decamer primers from the set of University of British Columbia were employed and nine lineages were classified. Lineages B, C and H were predominant, contributing up to 70% of total pathogens in this study. Analysis showed that the distribution of each lineage differs from the predominant lineages across Thailand in such that other lineages were restricted in particular area. For instance, lineage A was limited only in southern Thailand, whereas wide distribution of lineages B and C reflected an influence of both biological and physical effects on pathogen variation. Principal component analysis resulted in a total of four groups of blast pathogen with small distinctions between barley-, rice-, weed- and wild rice-infected blast. Bridging relationships occurred among border isolates of weed and rice blast suggesting a chance of migrations between hosts. Higher diversity was observed in northern, north-eastern and central Thailand while eastern and southern parts were rather low. Genetic diversity indices elucidated an abundance of pathogen lineages existing in northern Thailand suggesting that it should be the centre of diversity.",
keywords = "Genetic diversity, Pyricularia grisea, Random amplification of polymorphic DNA, Rice blast",
author = "P. Sirithunya and T. Sreewongchai and S. Sriprakhon and T. Toojinda and S. Pimpisithavorn and C. Kosawang and P. Smitamana",
year = "2008",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1111/j.1439-0434.2007.01341.x",
language = "English",
volume = "156",
pages = "196--204",
journal = "Journal of Phytopathology",
issn = "0931-1785",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Assessment of genetic diversity in Thai isolates of Pyricularia grisea by random amplification of polymorphic DNA

AU - Sirithunya, P.

AU - Sreewongchai, T.

AU - Sriprakhon, S.

AU - Toojinda, T.

AU - Pimpisithavorn, S.

AU - Kosawang, C.

AU - Smitamana, P.

PY - 2008/4

Y1 - 2008/4

N2 - One hundred and seventy-four isolates of Pyricularia grisea were collected from various hosts such as barley, rice, weed and wild rice in Thailand. Seven arbitrary decamer primers from the set of University of British Columbia were employed and nine lineages were classified. Lineages B, C and H were predominant, contributing up to 70% of total pathogens in this study. Analysis showed that the distribution of each lineage differs from the predominant lineages across Thailand in such that other lineages were restricted in particular area. For instance, lineage A was limited only in southern Thailand, whereas wide distribution of lineages B and C reflected an influence of both biological and physical effects on pathogen variation. Principal component analysis resulted in a total of four groups of blast pathogen with small distinctions between barley-, rice-, weed- and wild rice-infected blast. Bridging relationships occurred among border isolates of weed and rice blast suggesting a chance of migrations between hosts. Higher diversity was observed in northern, north-eastern and central Thailand while eastern and southern parts were rather low. Genetic diversity indices elucidated an abundance of pathogen lineages existing in northern Thailand suggesting that it should be the centre of diversity.

AB - One hundred and seventy-four isolates of Pyricularia grisea were collected from various hosts such as barley, rice, weed and wild rice in Thailand. Seven arbitrary decamer primers from the set of University of British Columbia were employed and nine lineages were classified. Lineages B, C and H were predominant, contributing up to 70% of total pathogens in this study. Analysis showed that the distribution of each lineage differs from the predominant lineages across Thailand in such that other lineages were restricted in particular area. For instance, lineage A was limited only in southern Thailand, whereas wide distribution of lineages B and C reflected an influence of both biological and physical effects on pathogen variation. Principal component analysis resulted in a total of four groups of blast pathogen with small distinctions between barley-, rice-, weed- and wild rice-infected blast. Bridging relationships occurred among border isolates of weed and rice blast suggesting a chance of migrations between hosts. Higher diversity was observed in northern, north-eastern and central Thailand while eastern and southern parts were rather low. Genetic diversity indices elucidated an abundance of pathogen lineages existing in northern Thailand suggesting that it should be the centre of diversity.

KW - Genetic diversity

KW - Pyricularia grisea

KW - Random amplification of polymorphic DNA

KW - Rice blast

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=40849136310&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1111/j.1439-0434.2007.01341.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1439-0434.2007.01341.x

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:40849136310

VL - 156

SP - 196

EP - 204

JO - Journal of Phytopathology

JF - Journal of Phytopathology

SN - 0931-1785

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 291619880