Eleven of these sequences showed significant identity to P. graminis F1 ITS ribosomal DNA (Table 1), one to P. betae F67 ITS rDNA and nine to Arabidopsis rDNA. For the remaining seven sequences, the closest matches were to uncultured Basidiomycetes (two clones) and an uncultured Helotiales,
and there were partial matches (short regions of high identity in a limited part) to Urostyla grandis, Anguina agropyri and an ectomycorrhizal fungus. The nucleotide sequence of one clone showed no significant identity to any sequence in GenBank. The identification of Arabidopsis and other non-Polymyxa sequences in the roots is not unexpected, as only one of the primers used (Pxfwd1) is Polymyxa specific, whereas the ITS4 primer Everolimus mouse is a generic, ‘fungal’ rDNA primer. Sequences from these
experiments (approximately 430–500 bp) were aligned with existing Polymyxa rDNA sequences and phylogenetic analyses were performed in mega4 (Fig. 4). With the exception of LeWil clone 34, which grouped with P. betae, all of the other Polymyxa sequences obtained from Arabidopsis root samples formed a clade with the P. graminis F1 (ribotype I) isolate (Y12824, 96% support from bootstrapping). There was strong bootstrap support (98%) separating the Col-0 Woburn clone 3 sequence from the other sequences in this clade. The sequence identity between P. graminis type I sequences and those of P. betae was around 80%. The range of Polymyxa sequences Omipalisib obtained from the Arabidopsis roots was diverse, but not unexpected as previous work has demonstrated that plants can contain
more than one ribotype of Polymyxa in their roots (Ward et al., 2005; Vaïanopoulos et al., 2007; Smith, 2008). The diversity seen could also be due to the heterogeneity between rDNA repeat units in the same Polymyxa spore or cell. Collectively, our results indicate that Arabidopsis is susceptible to infection by Polymyxa spp. Polymyxa-like spore clusters were identified in root hairs of Arabidopsis Ler-0 plants and structures resembling young Polymyxa-like zoosporangia in the roots of Col-0 plants. The putative zoosporangium is not like that of any of the other plasmodiophorid genera. Although these structures Abiraterone clinical trial were not observed in all plants, it is possible that they were present in parts of the root system other than those examined by microscopy. The spores, although similar in appearance to Plasmodiophora, were aggregated together in clusters, whereas Plasmodiophora spores do not form aggregates. Additionally, no galls were observed in the roots of these plants, as would occur in Plasmodiophora infections, and a Plasmodiophora-specific PCR assay showed that Plasmodiophora was not present in the Arabidopsis or soil samples.