Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of Didymella rabiei Affecting Chickpea in Ethiopia
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Gezahegne Getaneh, Tadele Tefera, Fikre Lemessa, Seid Ahmed Kemal, Tarekegn Fite, Jandouwe Villinger. (30/9/2021). Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of Didymella rabiei Affecting Chickpea in Ethiopia. journal of Fungi, 7 (10).
Abstract
Ascochyta blight, also known as chickpea blight, which is caused by the fungal pathogen,
Didymella rabiei, is an important disease affecting chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) in many countries. We
studied the genetic diversity and population structure of 96 D. rabiei isolates collected from three
geographic populations in Ethiopia using simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers. We confirmed the
genetic identity of 89 of the D. rabiei isolates by sequencing their rRNA internal transcribed spacer
region genes. The chickpea blight pathogen isolates were genetically diverse, with a total of 51 alleles
identified across 6 polymorphic SSR loci, which varied from 3 to 18 (average 8.5) alleles per SSR
marker. The observed heterozygosity and expected heterozygosity ranged from 0.01 to 0.92 and 0.19
to 0.86, respectively. The mean polymorphic information content value of the D. rabiei populations
was 0.58, with a mean gene diversity of 0.61 among loci. Gene flow (Nm = number of migrants) for
the three populations of D. rabiei isolates ranged from 1.51 to 24.10 (average 6.2) migrants/cluster.
However, the genetic variation between the D. rabiei populations was small (8%), with most of the
variation occurring within populations (92%). Principal component analysis to visualize genetic
variation showed that the D. rabiei isolates obtained from most of the chickpea samples formed
roughly three groups on a two-dimensional coordinate plane. Similarly, the clustering of individuals
into populations based on multi-locus genotypes (using Clumpak) grouped isolates into three
clusters but with individual isolate admixtures. Hence, no clear geographic origin-based structuring
of populations could be identified. To our knowledge, this is the first report of D. rabiei diversity in
Ethiopia. Virulence studies should be conducted to develop chickpea varieties that are resistant to
more aggressive pathogen populations.
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Kemal, Seid Ahmed https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1791-9369