Mycologia
1999: Vol. 91, No. 6, pp. 964977.
Cochliobolus phylogenetics
and the origin of known, highly virulent pathogens, inferred
from ITS and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene
sequences
M. L. Berbee, Mona Pirseyedi and S.
Hubbard
Department of Botany, 6270 University Blvd.,
University of British Columbia V6T 1Z4
Canada
Abstract
We evaluate the phylogenetic distribution of known, highly
virulent plant pathogens in the genus Cochliobolus
(sexually reproducing species in the Ascomycota,
Pleosporaceae) and assess the relationship between
Cochliobolus species and species of Curvularia
and Bipolaris (asexual states of fungi in the
Ascomycota, Pleosporaceae). To infer a phylogeny, we have
used two sequence regions: (i) the complete ITS 1, ITS 2, and
5.8S rDNA sequences for 65 fungal isolates and (ii) a 600 bp
fragment of the housekeeping gene gpd, coding for
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, for 54 isolates. We
combined ITS, 5.8S and gpd sequence data from 41
species. In the Cochliobolus clade, 31 out of 32
species fit clearly into one of two groups. One species,
Cochliobolus homomorphus, did not fit clearly into
either group. The 13 species in Cochliobolus Group 1
grouped together with 100% bootstrap support from the
combined ITS/gpd data. This group included
Cochliobolus and Bipolaris species that cause
serious crop losses, such as Co. sativus, Co. miyabeanus,
Co. carbonum and Co. heterostrophus. However,
within Group 1, the known, highly virulent pathogens did not
form a monophyletic group of species. Average substitution
levels between pairs of species in the Group 1 were low,
about 1.7% in the ITS region, suggesting that these
species had radiated rapidly and recently. The 18 species in
Cochliobolus Group 2 formed a monophyletic group in
96% of parsimony bootstrap replicates of the combined
ITS and gpd data. The Cochliobolus species that
were transferred into the segregate genus
Pseudocochliobolus were in this second group. This
study included 9 Curvularia and Bipolaris
species without known sexual states and they all appear to be
recently derived from among sexual species of
Cochliobolus. Both Curvularia and
Bipolaris were polyphyletic, but only Bipolaris
states were associated with Group 1 Cochliobolus
species. Both Curvularia and Bipolaris states
were associated with species in Cochliobolus Group 2.
Return to Berbee home page.
Return to Taylor Lab home page.