Clonal composition of the peach-potato aphid Myzus persicae (Homoptera: Aphididae) in France and Scotland: Comparative analysis with IGS fingerprinting and microsatellite markers

2003 
Summary Fourteen colonies of the peach-potato aphid, Myzus persicae, were taken either from French peach trees or weeds in 2001. Thirty five apomictic parthenogenetic lineages (APLs) were established. Ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer (IGS) fingerprinting was used to characterise these and 28 fingerprints were duly obtained. Those lineages with different fingerprints were considered different genotypes and those with the same fingerprint as the same. The genetic identity of APLs was further tested using four microsatellite loci. APLs that differed by IGS fingerprint had distinct microsatellite allele combinations and those that had the same IGS fingerprint had the same microsatellite allele combinations. The results confirmed that IGS types corresponded to different aphid genotypes. Independent APLs with identical IGS and microsatellite genotype were therefore considered different representatives of the same clone. APLs from M. persicae found on Scottish crops in 1995, 1996 and 2001, as well as a long-term laboratory line were also examined by the same methods. Their IGS fingerprints were similar or identical suggesting that they all belonged to the same clone. Microsatellite markers also suggested that these lineages were derived from a single clone. Some field lineages exhibited slight modifications to their IGS fingerprints confirming that the IGS evolves more rapidly than these microsatellite alleles. Thus, IGS will continue to provide a useful marker for aphid fieldwork.
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