Concordance of gene genealogies reveals reproductive isolation in the pathogenic fungus Coccidioides immitis
Koufopanou, V; Burt, A; Taylor, J W.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, v.94, n.10, (1997): 5478-5482.
Abstract
Simple cladogenetic theory suggests that gene genealogies
can be used to detect mixis in a population and delineate
reproductively isolated groups within sexual taxa. We have
taken this approach in a study of Coccidioides immitis, an
ascomycete fungus responsible for a recent epidemic of
coccidioidomycosis (Valley fever) in California. To test
whether this fungus represents a single sexual species throughout
its entire geographic range, we have compared genealogies from
fragments of five nuclear genes. The five genealogies show
multiple incompatibilities indicative of sex, but also share
a branch that partitions the isolates into two reproductively
isolated taxa, one centered in California and the other
outside California. We conclude that coccidioidomycosis can
be caused by two distinct noninterbreeding taxa. This result
should aid the future study of the disease and illustrates
the utility of the genealogical approach in population genetics.
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