Literature DB >> 17486976

Phylogenetics of Saccharomycetales, the ascomycete yeasts.

Sung-Oui Suh1, Meredith Blackwell, Cletus P Kurtzman, Marc-André Lachance.   

Abstract

Ascomycete yeasts (phylum Ascomycota: subphylum Saccharomycotina: class Saccharomycetes: order Saccharomycetales) comprise a monophyletic lineage with a single order of about 1000 known species. These yeasts live as saprobes, often in association with plants, animals and their interfaces. A few species account for most human mycotic infections, and fewer than 10 species are plant pathogens. Yeasts are responsible for important industrial and biotechnological processes, including baking, brewing and synthesis of recombinant proteins. Species such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae are model organisms in research, some of which led to a Nobel Prize. Yeasts usually reproduce asexually by budding, and their sexual states are not enclosed in a fruiting body. The group also is well defined by synapomorphies visible at the ultrastructural level. Yeast identification and classification changed dramatically with the availability of DNA sequencing. Species identification now benefits from a constantly updated sequence database and no longer relies on ambiguous growth tests. A phylogeny based on single gene analyses has shown the order to be remarkably divergent despite morphological similarities among members. The limits of many previously described genera are not supported by sequence comparisons, and multigene phylogenetic studies are under way to provide a stable circumscription of genera, families and orders. One recent multigene study has resolved species of the Saccharomycetaceae into genera that differ markedly from those defined by analysis of morphology and growth responses, and similar changes are likely to occur in other branches of the yeast tree as additional sequences become available.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17486976     DOI: 10.3852/mycologia.98.6.1006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mycologia        ISSN: 0027-5514            Impact factor:   2.696


  31 in total

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9.  A multispecies-based taxonomic microarray reveals interspecies hybridization and introgression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

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