qPCR-based relative quantification of the brown algal endophyte Laminarionema elsbetiae in Saccharina latissima: variation and dynamics of host—endophyte interactions

Morphological changes—such as dark spots, twisted stipes and deformed blades—have been observed in wild and cultivated Saccharina latissima. The putative cause for the disease symptoms is the filamentous endophytic brown alga Laminarionema elsbetiae, which is known to invade stipes and fronds of its hosts. Little is known about this interaction and its occurrence in the field, although former studies indicated high endophyte prevalence in kelp populations. Previous epidemiological studies on kelp endophytes were mainly based on the examination of microscopic sections, followed by time-consuming isolation and cultivation steps in order to identify the endophyte and a reliable method to quantify endophyte infections was missing. As a novel approach, we established and validated a qPCR assay for relative quantification of the endophyte L. elsbetiae within its host S. latissima, which allows to examine both, the prevalence of endophytic algae and the severity of infections. The assay was shown to be highly specific and suitable to reliably detect small amounts of endophyte DNA in the host. Using this method, we detected very high endophyte prevalence in the investigated kelp populations, up to 100% in young S. latissima sporophytes in Brittany during spring. Furthermore, our results suggest that Saccharina sporophytes are infected early in their life and that seasonality and environmental factors have a significant impact on infection rates. In the future, this approach could also be applied to study other host-endophyte pairs using specific primers. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s10811-017-1367-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.


Introduction
The sugar kelp Saccharina latissima (Laminariales, Phaeophyceae) is an important primary producer in temperate to cold northern hemisphere coastal ecosystems (Bartsch et al. 2008) and an economically relevant seaweed with high industrial potential (Østgaard et al. 1993;Adams et al. 2009). Growing or being cultivated in the sea S. latissima is exposed to a high number of potentially harmful organisms such as fungi, bacteria or endophytic algae (Andrews 1977;Wu et al. 1983;Apt 1988a;Potin et al. 2002). Previous studies on the latter reported a high prevalence of filamentous endophytic algae in kelp populations, with up to 100% of infected individuals (Andrews 1977;Lein et al. 1991;Peters and Schaffelke 1996;Schaffelke et al. 1996;Ellertsdóttir and Peters 1997). Amongst them is Laminarionema elsbetiae (Ectocarpales, Phaeophyceae), a filamentous brown algal endophyte highly prevalent in European wild S. latissima populations (Peters and Ellertsdóttir 1996;Ellertsdóttir and Peters 1997). It invades stipes and fronds of its host, thereby potentially not only causing morphological changes but even more severe impairment as it has been shown for other filamentous endophytic brown algae (Yoshida and Akiyama 1979;Apt 1988a, b;Peters and Schaffelke 1996;Ellertsdóttir and Peters 1997;Thomas et al. 2009). Despite an increasing interest in this topic due to the economic importance of Saccharina aquaculture (Chen 2004), little is known about this particular interaction, its prevalence in the field, the natural infection process and variation under different environmental conditions. A considerable drawback is the lack of a common comparable and rapid method to conduct these studies. In particular, there is no reliable technique to quantify endophyte infections, which is crucial to investigate the dynamics of this phenomenon.
Quantitative PCR is a well-established tool for the detection of pathogens in the field of plant-pathogen interactions (Brouwer et al. 2003;Gachon et al. 2004) which has lately also been applied for the detection of the pathogenic oomycete Eurychasma dicksonii in Ectocarpus siliculosus (Gachon et al. 2009). Here, we developed a highly specific qPCR assay that is not only fast and reproducible but also suitable to detect minor amounts of target DNA. This method allows us to examine the prevalence of endophyte infections, i.e. the number of infected thalli in a population, and the severity of infection, i.e. the relative amount of endophyte present in the host tissue. The first aim of this study was to validate this qPCR assay according to recommended guidelines (Bustin et al. 2009). Subsequently, we applied the assay to examine the distribution of filaments of L. elsbetiae along the thallus of S. latissima and the impact of seasonality and geographic variation on endophyte infection rates in different kelp populations. The natural infection process was studied by cultivating laboratory-grown S. latissima sporophytes in a seaweed farm and comparing their infection rates with those of wild individuals. Finally, the assay was applied to assess the specificity of L. elsbetiae towards different kelp species.

In situ algal sampling
To determine the distribution of endophyte occurrence along the thallus, tissue was punched out (ø 2.8 cm) at four positions on S. latissima sporophytes: (1) 50% of the stipe length (piece of 2.8 cm length), (2) 10% of the blade length, (3) 50% of the blade length, and (4) 90% of the blade length. Samples of S. latissima were collected in the same location of different populations, i.e. in Northern Brittany (Perharidy near Roscoff;48.73°N,4.00°W,N = 10) in March and April 2016, in Southern Brittany (Locmariaquer;47.55°N, 2.92°W, N = 5) in March 2016, and in Western Scotland (Bridge over the Atlantic; 56.31°N, 5.58°W, N = 5) in April 2016. Additionally, two sections were made next to each punchout to look for the presence of endophytic filaments using a light microscope.
An experimental set-up was used to investigate the impact of natural infection on laboratory-grown sporophytes. Gametophytes descending from spores of S. latissima from Perharidy were seeded on collectors in February 2016 by submerging them in 50-mL Falcon tubes overnight. Then, the collectors were transferred to filtered seawater containing half-strength Provasoli enrichment (10 mL solution per L seawater, Provasoli 1968). The young sporophytes were grown in 11°C with 40 μmol photons m −2 s −1 with a light/dark cycle of 8/16 h during the first 20 days and 12/12 h until the end of the experiment. After 68 days, when the sporophytes had reached a length of 2-4 cm, a part of them was transferred to a seaweed farm in vicinity to the wild population (4 km distance) in April 2016 while the rest was maintained in laboratory conditions. In October 2016, infection rates in samples from the individuals cultivated in the farm (N = 57) were compared to samples collected from the wild population at Perharidy (N = 30) within the same week. The kelps kept in laboratory conditions since April 2016 served as controls (N = 27).
Saccharina latissima samples were collected in Southern Brittany in March 2016 (N = 12) and in Western Scotland in April 2016 (N = 30) and compared to the samples collected in Perharidy in March and April 2016 (N = 30, each) to investigate geographic variation of endophyte infection rates.
To explore host specificity of L. elsbetiae, tissue was punched out from distal parts of blades in L. digitata, L. hyperborea and L. ochroleuca (N = 10 for each species) collected in March 2017 in Perharidy and compared to the infection rate of S. latissima (N = 30). Additionally, 10 L seawater (N = 3) was collected and directly filtered through a 150-μm mesh. Subsequently, the water was filtered through 3-μm polycarbonate filters (Nucleopore Track-Etched Membranes, Whatman, GE Healthcare, USA) with a vacuum pump. The filters were transferred to cryotubes, frozen in liquid nitrogen and kept in − 20°C until DNA was extracted.
All samples were collected haphazardly regardless of possible morphological infection symptoms. The punched-out tissue was soaked dry with tissue paper, transferred to silica gel and stored in silica until DNA extraction.

Monospecific algal cultures
DNA from monospecific algal cultures was used for settingup and validating the qPCR assay. The cultures of laboratorygrown kelps were started from freshly released spores of mature sporophytes collected at Perharidy. Developing sporophytes were kept in 10-L bottles containing half-strength Provasoli enrichment (10 mL Provasoli solution/L seawater) in 14°C and~20 μmol photons m −2 s −1 at 12-h light/day with weekly changes of the culture medium. Cultures of the filamentous brown algal endophyte L. elsbetiae were grown from the strain LelsPH14-01 obtained from the Bezhin Rosko culture collection (origin Perharidy, France). Isolation of other algal strains from the order Ectocarpales was performed as described by Peters (1991). Ectocarpales cultures were kept in 14°C and 5 μmol photons m −2 s −1 at 12-h light/day with monthly changes of the culture medium (half-strength Provasoli enrichment). The cultured algal material was soaked dry with tissue paper and freeze-dried for DNA extraction.

DNA extraction
All samples were extracted according to the same protocol to limit differences in extraction yields. The dried algal material was ground in a mechanical bead grinder (Tissuelyser II, Qiagen, Germany) twice for 2 min at 30 Hz. Twenty milligrams of ground material was transferred to a 2-mL Eppendorf tube and used for the following DNA extraction that was adapted after Apt et al. (1995). One millilitre of extraction buffer (100 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 1.5 M NaCl, 2% CTAB, 50 mM EDTA [pH 8], 50 mM DTT) was added to the ground tissue, and samples were incubated at room temperature on a shaker at 250 rpm for 1 h. One vol of chloroform/ isoamyl alcohol (24:1) was added, and the two phases were mixed by vortexing and centrifuged at 10.000 rpm for 15 min. The upper phase was transferred to a new tube and 0.3 vol ethanol was added drop by drop until polysaccharide precipitation was visible, followed by a second chloroform extraction and another centrifugation step at 10.000 rpm for 15 min. The upper phase was transferred onto the filter of the Nucleospin plant II kit (Macherey-Nagel, Germany), and the protocol recommended by the manufacturer was followed from this step onwards with two elution steps of 50 μL.
For DNA extraction from the seawater samples, 1.5 mL of lysis buffer (0.7 M sucrose, 50 mM Tris pH 8, 40 mM EDTA) was added to each filter. One hundred microliter lysozyme (20 mg mL −1 ) was added, and samples were shaken at 37°C for 45 min. Twenty microliter proteinase K (20 mg mL −1 ) and 100 μL 20% SDS was added, and samples were homogenised by inversion and incubated at 55°C for 1 h. The content was transferred to a new tube and 1 vol phenol-chloroformisoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) was added; the phases were mixed and then centrifuged for 15 min at 4500 rpm at 4°C. The supernatant was mixed with 1 vol of the binding buffer from the Nucleospin plant II kit (Macherey-Nagel, Germany), and the protocol recommended by the manufacturer was followed from this step onwards with two elution steps of 50 μL.
DNA concentrations were measured with a Qubit Fluorometer (Thermo Fisher, USA) and diluted to 0.05 ng DNA μL −1 with autoclaved milliQ-filtered H 2 O.

qPCR and evaluation of the assay
The first primer pair CG64 and CG65 (Gachon et al. 2009) matched the 18S rDNA of all Ectocarpales and Laminariales (72-bp amplicon size) and was used to amplify 18S rDNA from both, host and endophyte DNA. The second primer pair LelsITS1-F2 (TTTCGAGAGCTTTCGAGAGG) and LelsITS1-R2 (TCTTCACGCCTCTTACATGG) (83-bp amplicon size) was designed to specifically match the partial ITS1 of Laminarionema elsbetiae. Specificity of the latter primer pair was tested by blasting the sequence and testing it with the DNA from 10 other brown algae diluted to 0.05 ng DNA μL −1 , including algal endophytes from the order Ectocarpales and possible hosts from the order Laminariales (Fig. S1). The qPCR products were run in a 2.5% agarose gel electrophoresis at 100 V for 25 min to check for presence or absence of bands.
Artificial mixtures of host and endophyte DNA were assembled to assess if different amounts of endophyte DNA were detectable reliably. Therefore, 1 ng of DNA from S. latissima was mixed with 0.0024, 0.012, 0.06 and 0.3 ng of DNA from L. elsbetiae.
Standard curves for the CG primer pair were constructed in triplicates with 1:5 serial dilutions of S. latissima DNA, extracted from a laboratory-grown sporophyte, ranging from a concentration of 0.5 ng to 6.4 × 10 −6 ng. Standard curves for the LelsITS1 primer pair were constructed with 1:2 serial dilutions of L. elsbetiae DNA, extracted from the strain LelsPH14-01, ranging from a concentration of 0.375 ng to 1.14 × 10 −5 ng.
A total of 2.5 μL LightCycler 480 SYBR Green I Master (2x, Roche Diagnostics, Germany) was mixed with the primers (400 nM), and 2.9 μL of this mix was added to 2.1 μL of diluted DNA (0.05 ng μL −1 ). Real-time PCR was performed on a LightCycler 480 (Roche Life Science, Germany) in white 384-well plates, sealed with adhesive foil.
A 5-min denaturation step at 95°C was followed by 55 cycles of 10 s at 95°C and 15 s at 60°C and 15 s at 72°C. After each run, a dissociation curve was obtained by heating the samples from 65 to 97°C. The dissociation curves indicated a single product for both primer pairs (data not shown). All samples were run in triplicates, as recommended by Pfaffl (2004), and autoclaved milliQ H 2 O was used as negative control. For relative quantification, the differences between the quantification cycles (ΔC q ) obtained by two qPCRs with the different primer pairs run in parallel on the same DNA sample were measured, as by Gachon et al. (2009). The resulting ΔC q values correlate negatively to the relative amount of endophyte DNA in the sample.
No relative quantification was performed for the water samples. Only the L. elsbetiae-specific primer pair was used in a qPCR reaction, and the final qPCR product was run in a 2.5% agarose gel electrophoresis to check for presence or absence of endophyte DNA.

Data analysis
Cycle thresholds were calculated with the LightCycler 480 Software (Roche, Germany) and exported to Excel 2013 (Microsoft, USA) where ΔC q values of each DNA sample were determined. Values are reported as average ± standard deviation. Graphs of the standard curves were drawn with GraphPad Prism (GraphPad Prism Software, Inc., USA), and the heat map was constructed in R Studio (RStudio, Inc., USA). SPSS (IBM Corp. Released 2013. IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 22.0. Armonk, NY: IBM Corp.) was used to perform statistical analyses. Normality of the data was tested with the Shapiro-Wilk test and homogeneity of variances with the Levene test. Data with normal distribution and homogeneous variances was analysed with oneway ANOVA. In the case of heterogeneous variances, the non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis test was used.

Set-up and validation of the qPCR assay
The specificity of the endophyte-specific primer pair was verified by blasting the sequence (BLASTN search), and no other species showed 100% identity over the full query. Furthermore, the primers were tested with 10 other brown algal species. Electrophoresis on an agarose gel resulted in no visible bands for any sample except L. elsbetiae, suggesting a strong specificity of the primer pair (Online Resource 1).
Artificial mixtures with the same amount of host DNA and different amounts of endophyte DNA were used to test if varying amounts of L. elsbetiae could be detected reliably, even in low concentrations (Online Resource 2A + B). Similar quantification cycles (C q ) were obtained with the CG primer pair. Since only small amounts of endophyte DNA were added, the total amount of DNA did not change significantly (Online Resource 2A). At the contrary, quantification of the same mixtures with the endophyte-specific primer pair (Online Resource 2B) resulted in different C q values, showing that the qPCR amplification was sufficiently discriminant to detect different concentrations of total endophyte DNA over the assessed range from 0.0024 to 0.3 ng μL −1 total DNA.
Standard curves were drawn for both primer pairs to define the linear dynamic range of stable quantification and to compare the efficiency of amplification. As the efficiency of both primer pairs was similar (88.74% for the CG primer pair and 91.08% for the Laminarionema specific primer pair, Online Resource 3A + B), no efficiency correction was applied. For the primer pair CG64 and CG65, a reliable quantification was possible for cycle numbers between 18 and 29 (Online Resource 3A). C q values of all samples lay within the range of this standard curve. For the LelsITS1 primer pair, the linear quantification range was between 19 and 32 cycles (Online Resource 3B). Thus, a maximal ΔC q value of 14 (32-18) was set for stable quantification of L. elsbetiae according to the standard curves. Samples with higher C q values or no endophytes were marked as Bundetected^.

Distribution of endophyte filaments along the thallus of S. latissima
To determine the distribution of L. elsbetiae along the thallus of S. latissima, a relative infection map was established by quantifying relative infection rates at four different positions along the thallus. Endophyte filaments of L. elsbetiae were unequally distributed within the host, with significantly more endophyte DNA being present in the blade tip (ΔC q = 10.8 ± 3.17) than in the stipe (ΔC q = 13.72 ± 0.72), at 10% of the blade length (ΔC q = 13.94 ± 0.29) and at 50% of the blade length (ΔC q = 13.62 ± 0.63, Fig. 1, Kruskal-Wallis test, p ≤ 0.01, Online Resource 5). The unequal distribution along the thallus was the same in kelps from all three geographic locations. Due to this result, the samples for the following studies were taken in the blade tips of the kelps, where most endophytes were expected to be present.
The presence of filamentous brown algae at the four positions in the same Saccharina sporophytes was also examined in microscopic sections (Fig. 2). Eighty percent of the thalli from Northern Brittany and Western Scotland and 60% of the thalli from Southern Brittany contained filamentous algae in the blade tips (Fig. 2b). Seventy percent and 20% of the stipe sections of sporophytes from Northern Brittany and Southern Brittany, respectively, contained endophytic filaments (Fig. 2a) while no filament was detected in the stipe sections of the S. latissima sporophytes from Western Scotland. In all examined sections, no endophytic filaments were visible in the intermediate sections (positions 2 and 3 in Fig. 1).

Infection rates in young kelps
The occurrence of the endophyte infection in the field was investigated by determining relative infection rates of young S. latissima sporophytes. One hundred percent of the young S. latissima sporophytes collected in Northern Brittany contained DNA of L. elsbetiae, compared to 93% of infected thalli in old (> 30 cm) sporophytes collected at the same time (Fig. 3a). When comparing the relative infection rates, no significant difference appeared in the ΔC q between sporophytes of all lengths (ΔC q = 9.82 ± 0.6, Fig. 3b) except for the samples with a thallus length from 6 to 10 cm where infection rates were slightly lower (ΔC q = 11.43 ± 0.7, Fig. 3b).

Natural infection of laboratory-grown samples in a seaweed farm
The course of natural infection of S. latissima with L. elsbetiae was further explored by an experimental set-up where laboratory-grown samples were transferred to a seaweed farm for 6 months and infection rates were compared to samples from a wild population. The number of thalli infected with L. elsbetiae was more than four times higher in wild samples (87% of infected thalli) than in the samples grown in the seaweed farm in close vicinity to the wild population (19%, Fig. 4a). No endophytes were detected in the laboratory controls (Fig. 4a). While the laboratory-grown samples in the seaweed farm were heavily covered with epiphytes (data not shown), the qPCR revealed significantly lower infection rates by the endophyte L. elsbetiae (ΔC q = 11.81 ± 1.4) as compared to wild samples (ΔC q = 8.99 ± 2.5) (one-way ANOVA, p ≤ 0.01, Fig. 4b, Online Resource 6).  Fig. 5a). The relative amount of L. elsbetiae filaments in infected thalli also increased during spring and was significantly higher between July and September (ΔC q = 7.38 ± 1.8 and 7.06 ± 2.4, respectively) than during the rest of the year (one-way ANOVA, p ≤ 0.01, Fig. 5b, Online Resource 6). Infection rates decreased in October, reaching the lowest value in February (ΔC q = 10.75 ± 2.1) and increasing again in March (Fig. 5b).

Geographic variation of relative infection rates
Geographic variation of relative infection rates of L. elsbetiae in S. latissima sporophytes was determined by samplings in three different populations in Southern Brittany, Northern Brittany and Western Scotland during March and April 2016. While 85 and 93% of the sporophytes collected in Northern Brittany and Western Scotland, respectively, were infected with the endophyte, only 33% of sporophytes from Southern Brittany contained detectable amounts of endophytic filaments in their blade tips (Fig. 6a). Moreover, the relative infection rate by L. elsbetiae was shown to differ significantly between Western Scotland and Brittany (one-way ANOVA, p = 0.01, Fig. 6b, Online Resource 6). Kelps collected in Southern Brittany (Locmariaquer) contained significantly less L. elsbetiae (ΔC q = 11.78 ± 2.4) than the ones from Northern Brittany (Perharidy, ΔC q = 9.93 ± 2.3). The sporophyte samples collected at the Bridge over the Atlantic (Western Scotland) were most heavily infected (ΔC q = 8.39 ± 3, Fig. 6b).

Host specificity
To explore the host specificity of L. elsbetiae, endophyte prevalence and infection rates of S. latissima were compared to infection rates of the adjacent kelp species L. hyperborea, L. digitata and L. ochroleuca. While 93% of the S. latissima sporophytes were infected with L. elsbetiae, endophyte DNA was only detected in 20 and 50% of the L. digitata and L. ochroleuca individuals, respectively, collected at the same location and the same time (Fig. 7a). Laminarionema elsbetiae was not detected in DNA from any sample of L. hyperborea. Additionally, infection rates in S. latissima sporophytes were significantly higher (ΔC q = 8.97 ± 2) than in L. digitata and L. ochroleuca individuals adjacent to the Saccharina population (ΔC q = 11.98 ± 0.9 and 12.58 ± 1.3, respectively, one-way ANOVA, p ≤ 0.01, Fig. 7b, Online Resource 6).
DNA of L. elsbetiae was also specifically amplified in the seawater samples collected at three locations in close vicinity to Saccharina sporophytes (Online Resource 4).

Discussion
A specific and reliable qPCR approach for epidemiological studies In our study, we detected a high prevalence of L. elsbetiae in S. latissima with up to 100% of infected individuals in Northern Brittany. This is in consistence with previous epidemiological studies about filamentous endophytes in brown algae in the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean (Andrews 1977;Lein et al. 1991;Peters and Schaffelke 1996;Ellertsdóttir and Peters 1997;Peters 2003). Until now, epidemiological studies were based on different methodological approaches, rendering them difficult to compare. Andrews (1977) determined an infection rate of 20% by quantifying galls on S. latissima presumably caused by a filamentous brown algal endophyte. However, the presence of endophyte filaments is not always directly connected to the occurrence of disease symptoms (Ellertsdóttir and Peters 1997;Gauna et al. 2009b) and indeed most of the sporophytes infected with L. elsbetiae sampled in our study did not show any disease symptoms. Thus, an epidemiological survey based on the occurrence of symptoms could lead to an underestimation if endophytes do not cause identifiable changes in the host. Other studies were based on counting endophyte filaments in microscopic sections (Lein et al. 1991;Gauna et al. 2009a). While this method provides valuable information about the presence of filamentous endophytes, a precise quantification by visual scoring and the subsequent statistical analysis are difficult. Furthermore, filamentous endophytes are difficult to identify in microscopic sections as species are morphologically little differentiated (Eggert et al. 2010). For a trustworthy identification, the endophyte needs to be isolated and cultivated in a time-consuming process (Ellertsdóttir and Peters 1997;Peters 2003;Amsler et al. 2009).
The evaluation of our qPCR assay confirmed that this new approach is suitable not only for a relative quantification of the prevalence and the severity of infection but also for a specific, rapid and sensitive identification of L. elsbetiae. A possible concern might be that the L. elsbetiae-specific primer pair could amplify other so far unknown species. However, up to now, only one species of the genus Laminarionema is described and the related genera Laminariocolax and Microspongium which also contain filamentous endophytes (Peters and Burkhardt 1998;Peters 2003) are not targeted by the L. elsbetiae-specific primer pair (Online Resource 1). The results obtained using the qPCR assay correlate with the detection of endophytic filaments by microscopy in highly infected parts. Moreover, low amounts of endophyte DNA could be detected by qPCR in parts of the blade where no filaments where visible in the microscopic sections showing that the qPCR assay is a more sensible tool than microscopy.

Early occurrence of the infection in nature
Since it has been reported for other host-endophyte pairs that endophytic filaments can be distributed unequally within the host (Amsler et al. 2009;Gauna et al. 2009a), we investigated the distribution of endophytes along the host thallus and confirmed that most endophytes were located in the blade tips of S. latissima. This stresses the importance of careful planning of samplings for epidemiological studies, as the infection rates may differ significantly depending on where exactly on the thallus samples are taken. The meristematic tissue of kelps lies at the junction between stipe and blade; the blade tip is  (Wilkinson 1995). The concentration of endophyte filaments in the blade tip could indicate that hosts are infected very early in their life, and the endophyte subsequently stays in the same tissue while this part grows further away from the meristem. To test this hypothesis, we collected young kelps of different lengths in order to compare the infection rates with the old sporophytes. Laminarionema elsbetiae was detected in all of the sampled kelps, even the very young ones (> 5 cm), suggesting an early infection of the kelp. Furthermore, kelps from a seaweed farm, which had been grown in lab conditions for 10 weeks, were significantly less infected than wild kelps although the farm and population were in vicinity to each other (4 km distance), i.e. exposed to similar environmental conditions. These kelps were kept in the laboratory during their early life, and once they were taken out to the sea, the cell walls might have already changed enough to make it more difficult for the endophyte to enter (Apt 1988a). Similarly, in the case of the closely related pacific kelp species Saccharina japonica, only young specimen could be infected by the filamentous brown algal endophyte Streblonema sp., while the filaments of the endophyte could not penetrate the tissue of mature kelps, unless it presented a wounding site (Apt 1988a). Previous experimental infection of S. latissima with Laminarionema used very young host sporophytes (< 10 mm in length), which were readily infected (Heesch and Peters 1999). Overall, our results suggest that S. latissima is infected with L. elsbetiae while it is still very young and keeping Saccharina cultures under controlled conditions for a certain amount of time could reduce infection rates of cultivated S. latissima with L. elsbetiae.

Variation of infection rates
The severity of infection differed not only along the thallus but also depended on seasonal and geographic location. Infection rates within the Saccharina population in Northern Brittany were significantly higher in summer as compared to the rest of the year. This is in agreement with observations on endophytic infections in S. latissima and two other kelp species on Helgoland (Ellertsdóttir and Peters 1997) and in S. latissima in the Pacific Northwest (Andrews 1977). However, as seasonal samplings were only conducted in Northern Brittany, additional samplings at other locations are necessary to confirm a general pattern of seasonal variation. Kelps may lose distal parts of their blade in winter, thereby shedding infected tissue (Ellertsdóttir and Peters 1997). Furthermore, it is possible that growth rates of the endophyte benefit from higher summer temperatures. Seasonal variation of infection rates could also be connected to the life cycle of L. elsbetiae. The endophyte spreads between hosts via zoospores that penetrate the host tissue (Heesch and Peters 1999) and on Helgoland fertile structures in L. elsbetiae were found only during spring (Peters and Ellertsdóttir 1996). As we were able to detect L. elsbetiae DNA in seawater samples taken around a S. latissima population in spring, it is likely that spores of the endophyte were present in the seawater during this time, spreading to infect new hosts.
Significant differences were found between kelp populations from France and Scotland both, in endophyte prevalence and infection rates, increasing from Southern Brittany to Western Scotland. Seawater temperature is decreasing along a latitudinal gradient from 14.1°C in Locmariaquer (Southern Brittany) to 12.4°C in Perharidy (Northern Brittany) and 9.5°C of average annual sea surface temperature in Oban (Western Scotland, data provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration). However, temperature is not the only factor that discriminates the three populations. The Saccharina populations in Western Scotland and Northern Brittany are also denser than the one in Southern Brittany, which lies near the distribution limit of S. latissima and host density plays an important role in spreading infective agents like spores (Clay 1990). Furthermore, the different examined populations are exposed to different strengths of currents. Ellertsdóttir and Peters (1997) found that endophyte prevalence was higher at more wave-exposed sites. Water depth is another factor that has a significant impact on endophyte distribution, with stronger disease symptoms in shallow water than in deep water Ellertsdóttir and Peters 1997) either by reducing the host fitness under higher UV radiation or by favouring endophyte growth rates due to higher PAR . Since environmental factors seem to have a significant impact on the host-endophyte relationship, experiments under controlled laboratory conditions are necessary to examine the effect of single environmental factors on the interaction between S. latissima and L. elsbetiae.
cell wall compositions-for example in the content of celluloses, hemicelluloses and alginates (Siegel and Siegel 1973)-could play an important part in the host specificity of algal endophytes. As the cell wall composition of brown algae is known to vary based on environmental conditions (Rosell and Srivastava 1984;Adams et al. 2011;Deniaud-Bouët et al. 2014), these differences could also contribute to geographic and seasonal variations in the endophyte prevalence. Furthermore, host specificity might be based on different kelp species having specific defence reactions. The oxidative burst upon elicitation with oligoguluronates, an early defence response, differs amongst several members of the Laminariales (Küpper et al. 2002). Finally, the ability of an endophyte to infect a host is also strongly linked to the life cycles of both, the host and the endophyte. As our results suggest that kelps are infected at a very young age, host specificity might be coupled to the occurrence of young sporophytes of different species in the field and the synchronisation of spore release from L. elsbetiae. Fertility periods and subsequently the appearance of young sporophytes are known to be variable within the Laminariales (Bartsch et al. 2008), but further studies on the life cycle of L. elsbetiae are necessary to better understand these relationships.
Overall, the consistency in results of our approach with microscopic observation and previous epidemiological studies based on other methods confirm the reliability of our qPCR assay. This efficient tool is well adapted for routine application and processing of large sample numbers for epidemiological studies on infections of S. latissima with L. elsbetiae. Moreover, the approach could be easily transferred to other host-endophyte pairs by designing specific primers and therefore be applied to extensive studies on kelp-endophyte interactions.