Title: Summary of previous lesson
1Summary of previous lesson
- ASCOMYCETES, BASIDIOMYCETES, OOMYCETES
- DISEASE TRIANGLE humans
- Locus/ allele/ polymorphisms
- Invasive organism
- Genetic traits of invasive populations reduced
genetic diversity and differentiation among new
populations because of founder effect and lack of
equilibrium
2Definitions
- Alternatively fixed alleles
- Dominant vs. co-dominant markers
- Genotype
3Alternatively fixed alleles
- Two flower species (species 1 and species 2) can
have one of two features - Long (L) or short (s) leaves
- Red ( R) or white (w) flowers
- Ten individuals from species 1 have the following
traits - LR LR LR LR LR LR LR sR sR sR
- Ten individuals from species 2 have the following
traits - sw sw sw sw sw sw sw Lw Lw Lw
4Which one is the alternatively fixed allele?
- Both alleles will differentiate the groups
(frequencies are significantly different) - Only one will be diagnostic because alternatively
fixed - It is the color of the flower all flowers in
species 1 are R, all flowers in species 2 are w
(all implies your sampling size is adequate!!)
5Dominant vs. co-dominant markers
- Flowers are red or white or yellow, DNA sequence
is agg, agt, agc DNA fragment is 10, 12 0r 14 bp
long (CO-DOMINANT, we know what alternative
alleles are) - Flowers are red or non-red, DNA is agg or not,
size is 10bp or not. We only see the dominant
allele and we express it in binary code
1(present), 0(absent)
6Limitations of co-dominant markers
- Not all non-red flowers are the same, but we
assume they are (non red flowers can be orange or
yellow) - If at one locus we have a dominant A allele and a
recessive a allele, using a codominant marker we
would say AAAa but not aa. We know in reality
AA and Aa are quite different.
7Genotype
- A unique individual as defined by an array of
genetic markers. (the more markers you have the
less mistaken identity you will have. - blonde
8 9 10- Blonde
- Blue-eyed
- Hairy
- 6 feet tall
11- Blonde
- Blue-eyed
- Hairy
- 6 feet tall
- Missing two molars
12In the case of microbes it will probably be
something like
- Genotype A 01010101
- Genotype B 00110101
- Genotype C 00010101
13Summary of third lesson
- DNA polymorphisms can be diagnostic
- Mutations/Sex/Barriers to mating
- Plant Diseases can be biotic (interaction between
host and causal agent ), or abiotic - Many organisms can cause plant diseases, but
fungi are the No.1 cause - Diversity of fungi, but all have ideal structure
for plant infection - hypha/cord/rhizomorph/infection peg/appressorium
- Sexual vs. asexual reproduction can do both
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16Fungi again!
- ASCOMYCETES
- BASIDIOMYCETES
- OOMYCETES (fungus-like, water molds)
17ASCOMYCETES
- Yeasts (fermentation, human mycoses)
- Truffles, morels
- Penicillia (penicillin), Fusaria (potent toxins,
damping off of seedlings), molds
18Ascus is the sack in which the spores are
contained
19Asci can be placed on a disk (apothecium), many
apothecia can be together in a fruitbody
Morel fruitbody
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21Asci can be carried inside a flask (perithecium)
Nectria
22Ploidy is mostly n
23BASIDIOMYCETES
- Mushrooms. mycorrhizal
- Wood decay organisms
- Rusts, Smuts
- Yeasts and damping off
24Toadstools and huitacochle are both basidiomycetes
25Basidium means club, it carries the
basidiospores (dispersion propagules) naked
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28Most of their life, they are nn (dikaryons),
some rare ones are diploid
29Oomycetes
- Belong to the kingdom Stramenopila, used to be
called Chromista - Phytophthora, Pythium, Saprolegnia
H20
30Hyphae, sporangia, and zoospores of P. ramorum
31Most of their lifecycle they are 2n Have
cellulose in cell wall Not fungi!!, but
look like them because of convergent evolution
32Fungi do not photosynthesize
- Biotrophic mycorrhyzae, rusts
- Endophites clavicipetaceae,
- Necrotrophic most pathogens
- Saprobes primary (involved in litter
decomposition)
33DISEASE!!
- Symptoms vs. signs e.g. chlorosis vs. fruit-body
- The disease triangle
34Disease triangle
35Human activities affecting disease incidence in
forests
- Introduction of exotic pathogens
- Planting trees in inappropriate sites
- Changing stand density, age structure,
composition, fire frequency - Wound creation
- Pollution, etc.
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37Effects of fire exclusion
38DISEASE plant microbe interaction
- 1-Basic compatibility need to be present
- 2- Chemotaxis, thighmotropy
- 3- Avirulence in pathogen matched by resistance
in host according to the gene for gene model - 4-Pathogenicity factors such as toxins and
enzymes important in the infection process
391- Basic compatibility
- Size of infectious propagules
- Timing of susceptibility in host and production
of infectious structures
402- Finding the host
- Chemotaxis pathogen has receptor that detects
food base in oomycetes zoospores will all swim
towards host - Thigmotropy recognizing morphological structures
that indicate presence of host prelude to
production of infective structures such as
infection pegs and appressoria
413- Infecting the host
- Pathogen will produce array of enzymes to infect
host cells - Upon identification of infection, host will
produce array of antimicrobial compounds , or
will kill some of its cells to halt infection
process (hypersensitive response)
423- Infecting the host
- Plant that are resistant, must be able to react
(dominant R resistant allele) - Plants that cannot react (r allele) are always
sensitive - Pathogens that are not noticed by plant can
infect (recessive avirulence allele) - Pathogens that are noticed may be stopped
(dominant A avurulence allele)
433- Infecting the host
- RA no disease
- Radisease
- radisease
- rAdisease
- There will be a strong selection in favor of R
alleles but R comes at a cost
444- Causing disease
- Correlated to ability of pathogen to invade plant
cell, pathogenicity is usually a dominant trait
45Categories of wild plant diseases
- Seed decay
- Seedling diseases
- Foliage diseases
- Systemic infections
- Parasitic plants
- Cankers, wilts , and diebacks
- Root and butt rots
- Floral diseases
46Seed diseases
- Up to 88 mortality in tropical Uganda
- More significant when seed production is episodic
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48Stress cone crop
BS on DF
49Seedling diseases
- Specific diseases, but also diseases of adult
trees can affect seedlings - Pythium, Phytophthora, Rhizoctonia, Fusarium are
the three most important ones - Pre- vs. post-emergence
- Impact up to 65 mortality in black cherry.
These diseases build up in litter - Shady and moist environment is very conducive to
these diseases
50Foliar diseases
- In general they reduce photosynthetic ability by
reducing leaf area. At times this reduction is
actually beneficial - Problem is accentuated in the case of small
plants and in the case other health issues are
superimposed - Often, e.g. with anthracnose,needle cast and
rust diseases leaves are point of entry for twig
and branch infection with permanent damage
inflicted
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53Systemic infections
- Viral?
- Phytoplasmas
- Peronospora and smuts can lead to over 50
mortality - Endophytism usually considered beneficial
54Grass endophytes
- Clavicipetaceae and grasses, e.g. tall fescue
- Mutualism antiherbivory, protection from
drought, increased productivity - Classic example of coevolutionary development
Epichloe infects flowers of sexually
reproducing fescue, Neotyphodium is vertically
transmitted in species whose sexual reproductive
ability has been aborted
55Parasitic plants
- True (Phoradendron) and dwarf mistletoe
(Arceuthobium) - Effects
- Up to 65 reduction in growth (Douglas-fir)
- 3-4 fold mortality rate increase
- Reduced seed and cone production
- Problem accentuated in multistoried uneven aged
forests
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60Cankers, wilts, and die-backs
- Includes extremely aggressive, often easy to
import tree diseases pine pitch canker, Dutch
elm disease, Chestnut blight, White pine blister
rust - Lethal in most cases, generally narrow host range
with the exception of Sudden Oak Death
61Root diseases
- Extremely common, probably represent the most
economically damaging type of diseases - Effects tree mortality (direct and indirect),
cull, effect on forest structure, effect on
composition, stand density, growth rate - Heterobasidion, Armillaria, Phellinus weirii,
Phytophthora cinnamomi
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66Removing food base causes infection of roots of
other trees
Hyphae in plant tissue or soil (short-lived)
Melanin-covered rhizomorphs will allow for fungus
to move to new food Sources (Armillaria mellea)
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70Effects of fire exclusion
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72Floral diseases
- Pollinator vectored smut on silene offers an
example of well known dynamic interaction in
which pathogen drives genetic variability of
hosts and is affected by environmental condition - Puccinia monoica produces pseudoflowers that
mimic real flowers. Effects reduction in seed
production, reduction in pollinators visits
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74Density-dependence
- Most diseases show positive density dependence
- Negative dependence likely to be linked to
limited inoculum e.g. vectors limited - If pathogen is host-specific overall density may
not be best parameter, but density of susceptible
host/race - In some cases opposite may be true especially if
alternate hosts are taken into account
75Counterweights to numerical effects
- Compensatory response of survival can exceed
negative effect of pathogen - carry over effects?
- NEGATIVE progeny of infected individuals less
fit - POSITIVE progeny more resistant (shown with
herbivory)
76Disease and competition
- Competition normally is conducive to increased
rates of disease limited resources weaken hosts,
contagion is easier - Pathogens can actually cryptically drive
competition, by disproportionally affecting one
species and favoring another
77Janzen-Connol
- Regeneration near parents more at risk of
becoming infected by disease because of proximity
to mother (Botryosphaeria, Phytophthora spp.).
Maintains spatial heterogeneity in tropical
forests - Effects are difficult to measure if there is
little host diversity, not enough
host-specificity on the pathogen side, and if
periodic disturbances play an important role in
the life of the ecosystem