| Literature DB >> 28402796 |
Ned B Klopfenstein1, Jane E Stewart2, Yuko Ota3, John W Hanna1, Bryce A Richardson4, Amy L Ross-Davis1, Rubén D Elías-Román5, Kari Korhonen6, Nenad Keča7, Eugenia Iturritxa8, Dionicio Alvarado-Rosales9, Halvor Solheim10, Nicholas J Brazee11, Piotr Łakomy12, Michelle R Cleary13, Eri Hasegawa14, Taisei Kikuchi15, Fortunato Garza-Ocañas16, Panaghiotis Tsopelas17, Daniel Rigling18, Simone Prospero18, Tetyana Tsykun18, Jean A Bérubé19, Franck O P Stefani20, Saeideh Jafarpour21, Vladimír Antonín22, Michal Tomšovský23, Geral I McDonald1, Stephen Woodward24, Mee-Sook Kim25.
Abstract
Armillaria possesses several intriguing characteristics that have inspired wide interest in understanding phylogenetic relationships within and among species of this genus. Nuclear ribosomal DNA sequence-based analyses of Armillaria provide only limited information for phylogenetic studies among widely divergent taxa. More recent studies have shown that translation elongation factor 1-α (tef1) sequences are highly informative for phylogenetic analysis of Armillaria species within diverse global regions. This study used Neighbor-net and coalescence-based Bayesian analyses to examine phylogenetic relationships of newly determined and existing tef1 sequences derived from diverse Armillaria species from across the Northern Hemisphere, with Southern Hemisphere Armillaria species included for reference. Based on the Bayesian analysis of tef1 sequences, Armillaria species from the Northern Hemisphere are generally contained within the following four superclades, which are named according to the specific epithet of the most frequently cited species within the superclade: (i) Socialis/Tabescens (exannulate) superclade including Eurasian A. ectypa, North American A. socialis (A. tabescens), and Eurasian A. socialis (A. tabescens) clades; (ii) Mellea superclade including undescribed annulate North American Armillaria sp. (Mexico) and four separate clades of A. mellea (Europe and Iran, eastern Asia, and two groups from North America); (iii) Gallica superclade including Armillaria Nag E (Japan), multiple clades of A. gallica (Asia and Europe), A. calvescens (eastern North America), A. cepistipes (North America), A. altimontana (western USA), A. nabsnona (North America and Japan), and at least two A. gallica clades (North America); and (iv) Solidipes/Ostoyae superclade including two A. solidipes/ostoyae clades (North America), A. gemina (eastern USA), A. solidipes/ostoyae (Eurasia), A. cepistipes (Europe and Japan), A. sinapina (North America and Japan), and A. borealis (Eurasia) clade 2. Of note is that A. borealis (Eurasia) clade 1 appears basal to the Solidipes/Ostoyae and Gallica superclades. The Neighbor-net analysis showed similar phylogenetic relationships. This study further demonstrates the utility of tef1 for global phylogenetic studies of Armillaria species and provides critical insights into multiple taxonomic issues that warrant further study.Entities:
Keywords: Agaricales; Armillaria; Bayesian analysis; split network; taxonomy; translation elongation factor 1-α gene
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28402796 DOI: 10.1080/00275514.2017.1286572
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycologia ISSN: 0027-5514 Impact factor: 2.696