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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/28252
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Title: | Phylogeography of the vector nematode Xiphinema index using mitochondrial and microsatellite markers highlights its Eastern origin closely linked to grapevine domestication. |
Authors: | NGUYEN, VC VILLATE, Laure Gutiérrez-Gutiérrez, Carlos Castillo, Pablo GHELDER, CV VAN HELDE, M PLANTARD, O ESMENJAUD, Daniel |
Keywords: | Xiphinema index mitDNA COI microsatellite Phylogeography |
Issue Date: | 13-Sep-2018 |
Publisher: | 33th Symposium of the European Society of Nematologists - ESN |
Citation: | 33th Symposium of the European Society of Nematologists |
Abstract: | The economic impact of the dagger nematode Xiphinema index is high in Western vineyards
by transmitting the damaging Grapevine fanleaf virus. Our phylogeographical study based on
mitochondrial sequences and microsatellite loci used more than 80 X. index representative
samples collected from the Middle- and Near East, the Eastern-, Central- and Western
Mediterranean, and the Western countries (Europe and the Americas). In this mainly (meiotic)
parthenogenetic species, the mitochondrial marker CytB was first considered for comparison
of X. index with the related amphimictic vector species X. diversicaudatum. Xiphinema index
exhibits a significantly lower intraspecific molecular variability than X. diversicaudatum, in
agreement with the respective reproduction modes of both nematodes. We then showed that
CytB, concatenated with additional mitochondrial genes ATP6, ND4 and COI, display a robust
phylogeographical pattern consisting in three clades grouping Eastern Mediterranean, Nearand Middle Eastern samples and a single clade grouping samples from Western
Mediterranean, Europe and the Americas. The highest mitochondrial polymorphism is
observed in one clade of Middle- and Near-East samples that overlaps the Transcaucasia and
Southern Caspian Sea region from where grapevine has been presumably domesticated and
that likely overlaps the nematode native area. East-to-west nematode dissemination appears
to match that of its domesticated grapevine host during the Antiquity mainly by the Greeks
and then the Romans. In Western Mediterranean, Europe and the Americas, two close and
almost exclusive mitochondrial haplotypes were detected. The first haplotype, found in
vineyards from the Southern Iberian Peninsula, Bordeaux and Provence, exhibits a high
microsatellite polymorphism. By contrast, the second haplotype contains a single
predominant microsatellite genotype surprisingly widespread in most Western countries. This
is almost certainly due to its recent dispersal during the massive grapevine replants following
the 19th century phylloxera crisis. Our data provide an improved knowledge of X. index diversity for future pest control strategies. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/28252 |
Type: | lecture |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Comunicações - Em Congressos Científicos Internacionais
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