Abstract

A total of 36 single-lesion isolates were collected from 9 crops of potato and 13 of tomato in different regions of Hungary in the past decade, particularly in 1998. These were analysed for mating type, sensitivity to metalaxyl, allozyme genotype at glucose-6-phosphate isomerase and peptidase loci and genotype at 24 loci detected using the multilocus RFLP probe RG57. The ratios of the mating types A1 to A2 were 8 : 9 and 4 : 15 among isolates recovered from potato and tomato, respectively. Resistance to metalaxyl was found more frequently among isolates from potato and in the A1 mating type. The populations were not clearly differentiated on the basis of host origin. All isolates were homozygous (100/100) at the locus for glucose-6-phosphate isomerase. Unlike in other European countries, the most common peptidase allele was 96. Genotypes at the peptidase locus were 96/96 (50%), 96/100 (27.7%) and 100/100 (16.6%). In addition, one isolate from 1993 and another from 1998, were defined as 83/96, a genotype that had not been described elsewhere. The 18 RG57 fingerprints that were observed among 36 isolates, with one exception, seem to be unique to Europe. On the basis of combined genotypic traits, 20 multilocus genotypes were designated. These data, which reveal a remarkable variability with unique genotypes of the late blight pathogen, suggest that migration and sexual and/or asexual recombination have a role in the recent evolution of the pathogen in Hungary.

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