Cryptic speciation and recombination in the aflatoxin-
producing fungus Aspergillus flavus
Geiser, D M; Pitt, J I; Taylor, J W.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United
States of America, v.95, n.1, (1998): 388-393.
Abstract
Aspergillus flavus, like approximately
onethird of ascomycete fungi, is thought to be cosmopolitan
and clonal because it has uniform asexual morphology. A.
flavus produces aflatoxin on nuts, grains, and cotton,
and assumptions about its life history are being used to
develop strategies for its biological control. We tested the
assumptions of clonality and conspecificity in a sample of 31
Australian isolates by assaying restriction site
polymorphisms from 11 protein encoding genes and DNA
sequences from five of those genes. A. flavus isolates
fell into two reproductively isolated clades (groups I and
II). The lack of concordance among gene genealogies among
isolates in one of the clades (group I) was consistent with a
history of recombination. Our analysis included five strains
of the closely related industrial fungus A. oryzae,
all of which proved to be clonally related to group I.
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