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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 2000, p. 4758-4763, Vol. 66, No. 11
Laboratory of Eukaryote Genetics, Petersburg
Nuclear Physics Institute, Gatchina 188350, Russia,1 and Plant Pathology
Section, Department of Plant Biology, The Royal Veterinary and
Agricultural University, DK-1871 Frederiksberg C,
Denmark2
Received 17 March 2000/Accepted 11 August 2000
We developed a PCR detection method that selectively recognizes a
single biological control agent and demonstrated that universally primed PCR (UP-PCR) can identify strain-specific markers. Antagonistic strains of Clonostachys rosea (syn. Gliocladium
roseum) were screened by UP-PCR, and a strain-specific marker
was identified for strain GR5. No significant sequence
homology was found between this marker and any other
sequences in the databases. Southern blot analysis of the PCR
product revealed that the marker represented a single-copy sequence
specific for strain GR5. The marker was converted into a
sequence-characterized amplified region (SCAR), and a specific PCR
primer pair was designed. Eighty-two strains, isolated primarily from
Danish soils, and 31 soil samples, originating from different localities, were tested, and this specificity was confirmed. Two strains responded to the SCAR primers under suboptimal PCR conditions, and the amplified sequences from these strains were similar, but not identical, to the GR5 marker. Soil assays in which total DNA was
extracted from GR5-infested and noninoculated field soils showed that
the SCAR primers could detect GR5 in a pool of mixed DNA and that no
other soil microorganisms present contained sequences amplified by the
primers. The assay developed will be useful for monitoring
biological control agents released into natural field soil.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Identification of a Universally Primed-PCR-Derived
Sequence-Characterized Amplified Region Marker for an Antagonistic
Strain of Clonostachys rosea and Development of a
Strain-Specific PCR Detection Assay
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Plant Pathology
Section, Department of Plant Biology, The Royal Veterinary and
Agricultural University, Thorvaldsensvej 40, DK-1871 Frederiksberg C,
Denmark. Phone: (45) 3528 3304. Fax: (45) 3528 3310. E-mail:
met{at}kvl.dk.
Present address: The Danish Veterinary Laboratory, DK-1790
Copenhagen, Denmark.
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