Burt 1996
Molecular markers reveal cryptic sex in the
human pathogen Coccidioides immitis
A. Burt, D. A. Carter, G. L. Koenig, T. J. White & J. W. Taylor
Department of Plant Biology
University of California
Berkeley 94720, USA
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 93: 770-773 (1996) [96149381]
Abstract
Coccidioides immitis, cause of a recent epidemic of "Valley
fever" in California, is typical of many eukaryotic microbes in that
mating and meiosis have yet to be reported, but it is not clear
whether sex is truly absent or just cryptic. To find out, we have
undertaken a population genetic study using PCR amplification,
screening for single-strand conformation polymorphisms, and
direct DNA sequencing to find molecular markers with nucleotide-level
resolution. Both population genetic and phylogenetic analyses indicate
that C. immitis is almost completely recombining. To our
knowledge, this study is the first to find molecular evidence for
recombination in a fungus for which no sexual stage has yet been
described. These results motivate a directed search for mating
and meiosis and illustrate the utility of single-strand conformation
polymorphism and sequencing with arbitrary primer pairs in molecular
population genetics.
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