Abstract

Cloned nuclear DNA fragments that detected restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) in homozygous loci of isolates of Phytophthora parasitica were used as genetic markers to investigate sexual recombination during oospore formation. It was found that the majority of the 23 oospore progeny studied in each of the two crosses carried both of the parental markers. However, aberrant recombination patterns were observed; some of the progeny were homozygous at one RFLP locus, whereas at another locus both of the parental markers were present. Only two of the progeny of each cross did not show sexual recombination with any of the four or five RFLP markers used. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was uniparentally inherited. In both crosses the majority of the progeny carried the mtDNA type of one of the common parental strains.

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