Phylogenetic origins of the asexual mycorrhizal symbiont
Cenococcum geophilum Fr. and other mycorrhizal fungi
among the ascomycetes
Lobuglio, K F; Berbee, M L; Taylor, J W.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, v.6, n.2, (1996):
287-294.
Abstract
The phylogenetic relationship of the asexual mycorrhizal
fungus Cenococcum geophilum Fr. among sexual ascomycetes
was examined by phylogenetic analysis of nucleotide
sequence data from the nuclear small subunit (ISS)
ribosomal RNA genic region. A specific focus of this study
was to test the hypothesis that the genus Elaphomyces is
the closest sexual relative of C. geophilum. Thus
nucleotide sequence data of five C. geophilum isolates,
three Elaphomyces species, and 44 additional genera of
ascomycetes were included in the phylogenetic analyses. The
percentage of similarity among the 18S rDNA sequences of
the C. geophilum isolates examined was 99.8 to 100%,
indicating that C. geophilum is monophyletic. Percent
similarity of nucleotide sequence among the three
Elaphomyces species was also high and ranged from 99.4 to
99.5%. DNA parsimony and distance analysis of the sequence
data separated these 2 genera on distant clades when
sequence from 44 additional genera of ascomycetes was
included. Parsimony and distance analyses positioned C.
geophilum as a basal, intermediate lineage between the two
Loculoascomycete orders, the Pleosporales and the
Dothidiales, and strongly supported Elaphomyces to be of
Plectomycete origin. Among the sexual Ascomycetes examined,
which included representative taxa from four classes of
filamentous Ascomycetes (Plectomycetes, Pyrenomycetes,
Discomycetes, and Loculoascomycetes), no close sexual
relative to C. geophilum was identified. At least four
independent lineages of mycorrhizal fungi were identified
among the ascomycetes examined.
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