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Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 59 (2009), 2388-2393; DOI  10.1099/ijs.0.009258-0
© 2009 International Union of Microbiological Societies

Dickeya species relatedness and clade structure determined by comparison of recA sequences

Neil Parkinson1, David Stead1, Janice Bew1, John Heeney1, Leah Tsror (Lahkim)2 and John Elphinstone1

1 Central Science Laboratory, Sand Hutton, York YO41 1LZ, UK
2 Agricultural Research Organisation, Gilat Research Centre, MP Negev 85280, Israel

Correspondence
Neil Parkinson
n.parkinson{at}csl.gov.uk

Using sequences from the recA locus, we have produced a phylogeny of 188 Dickeya strains from culture collections and identified species relatedness and subspecies clade structure within the genus. Of the six recognized species, Dickeya paradisiaca, D. chrysanthemi and D. zeae were discriminated with long branch lengths. The clade containing the D. paradisiaca type strain included just one additional strain, isolated from banana in Colombia. Strains isolated from Chrysanthemum and Parthenium species made up most of the clade containing the D. chrysanthemi type strain, and the host range of this species was extended to include potato. The D. zeae clade had the largest number of sequevars and branched into two major sister clades that contained all of the Zea mays isolates, and were identified as phylotypes PI and PII. The host range was increased from six to 13 species, including potato. The recA sequence of an Australian sugar-cane strain was sufficiently distinct to rank as a new species-level branch. In contrast to these species, Dickeya dadantii, D. dianthicola and D. dieffenbachiae were distinguished with shorter branch lengths, indicating relatively closer relatedness. The recA sequence for the type strain of D. dadantii clustered separately from other strains of the species. However, sequence comparison of three additional loci revealed that the D. dadantii type strain grouped together with the six other D. dadantii strains that were sequenced. Analysis of all four loci indicated that the D. dadantii strains were most closely related to D. dieffenbachiae. Three further branches (DUC-1, -2 and -3) were associated with these three species, which all diverged from a common origin and can be considered as a species complex. The large clade containing the D. dianthicola type strain comprised 58 strains and had little sequence diversity. One sequevar accounted for the majority of these strains, which were isolated nearly exclusively from eight hosts from Europe. Isolation of this sequevar on multiple occasions from Dianthus and (more recently) potato demonstrates that this lineage has become established in these species. The D. dadantii clade comprised 11 sequevars, and the known host range of the species was extended from eight to 19 species. New hosts included several ornamental species and potato. The clade DUC-1 was made up exclusively of potato strains originating from Europe, which had identical sequences, whilst DUC-2 strains were isolated mostly from a variety of monocotyledonous species. A single strain from Aglaonema sp. made up DUC-3. A single sequevar constituted the D. dieffenbachiae clade. The phylogenetic method described will provide a simple means for identification to the species and intraspecies level, which will support efforts to control these pathogens based on monitoring and surveillance.


The GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession numbers for the recA sequences determined in this study are FJ216965–FJ217158, as detailed in Supplementary Table S4.

Details of the strains and primers used, accession numbers of recA sequences and levels of recA sequence similarity between the principal Dickeya taxa and a conventional neighbour-joining recA phylogeny are available as supplementary material with the online version of this paper.







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