| Literature DB >> 28761785 |
Suldbold Jargalmaa1, John A Eimes2, Myung Soo Park1, Jae Young Park1, Seung-Yoon Oh1, Young Woon Lim1.
Abstract
Species in the genus Ganoderma include several ecologically important and pathogenic fungal species whose medicinal and economic value is substantial. Due to the highly similar morphological features within the Ganoderma, identification of species has relied heavily on DNA sequencing using BLAST searches, which are only reliable if the GenBank submissions are accurately labeled. In this study, we examined 113 specimens collected from 1969 to 2016 from various regions in Korea using morphological features and multigene analysis (internal transcribed spacer, translation elongation factor 1-α, and the second largest subunit of RNA polymerase II). These specimens were identified as four Ganoderma species: G. sichuanense, G. cf. adspersum, G. cf. applanatum, and G. cf. gibbosum. With the exception of G. sichuanense, these species were difficult to distinguish based solely on morphological features. However, phylogenetic analysis at three different loci yielded concordant phylogenetic information, and supported the four species distinctions with high bootstrap support. A survey of over 600 Ganoderma sequences available on GenBank revealed that 65% of sequences were either misidentified or ambiguously labeled. Here, we suggest corrected annotations for GenBank sequences based on our phylogenetic validation and provide updated global distribution patterns for these Ganoderma species.Entities:
Keywords: Ganoderma; Genbank sequence validation; Medicinal fungi; Polypores
Year: 2017 PMID: 28761785 PMCID: PMC5534161 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Representative Ganoderma specimens from the Seoul National University Fungus Collection (SFC) used in this study.
| Species | Specimen no. | Collection sites | Accession number | |||
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| Locality | Latitude/Longitude | ITS | ||||
| SFC20120721-08 | Gimpo-si, Gyeonggi-do | 37°36′08.43″N/126°46′33.51″E |
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| SFC20150624-06 | Pohang-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do | 36°04′20.02″N/129°12′36.56″E |
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| SFC20150630-14 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′28.50″N/126°59′38.92″E |
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| SFC20150812-48 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′28.30″N/126°59′44.28″E |
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| SFC20150918-07 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′26.70″N/126°59′36.12″E |
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| SFC20160315-03 | Yangyang-gun, Gangwon-do | 38°07′17.46″N/128°33′06.78″E |
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| SFC20160420-01 | – |
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| SFC20141001-16 | Inje-gun, Gangwon-do | 37°57′11.80″N/128°19′24.52″E |
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| SFC20141001-22 | Inje-gun, Gangwon-do | 37°57′02.55″N/128°19′29.46″E |
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| SFC20140701-31 | Inje-gun, Gangwon-do | 37°56′50.06″N/128°19′47.85″E |
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| SFC20160115-20 | Yangpyeong-gun, Gyeonggi-do | 37°29′20.09″N/127°36′34.14″E |
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| SFC20141001-24 | Inje-gun, Gangwon-do | 37°56′46.46″N/128°20′00.98″E |
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| SFC20141001-25 | Inje-gun, Gangwon-do | 37°57′13.39″N/128°19′16.80″E |
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| SFC20141012-02 | Inje-gun, Gangwon-do | 37°57′12.84″N/128°19′18.18″E |
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| SFC20150930-02 | Inje-gun, Gangwon-do | 38°07′30.12″N/128°12′10.08″E |
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| SFC20130404-21 | Sangju-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do | 36°31′47.93″N/128°04′27.06″E |
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| SFC20140702-12 | Seogwipo-si, Jeju-do | 33°14′54.58″N/126°21′03.42″E |
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| SFC20140703-17 | Jeju-si, Jeju-do | 33°26′24.63″N/126°37′39.49″E |
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| SFC20150418-05 | Gwanak-gu, Seoul | 37°27′21.15″N/126°56′57.18″E |
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| SFC20150612-11 | Donghae-si, Gangwon-do | 37°27′51.09″N/129°01′00.16″E |
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| SFC20150630-23 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′24.07″N/126°59′36.17″E |
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| SFC20150701-06 | Jeju-si, Jeju-do | 33°19′31.62″N/126°16′50.62″E |
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| SFC20150723-01 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′22.66″N/126°59′37.49″E |
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| SFC20150812-02 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′21.62″N/126°59′38.18″E |
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| SFC20150812-35 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′20.40″N/126°59′45.21″E |
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| SFC20150812-36 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′27.81″N/126°59′44.59″E |
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| SFC20150918-03 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′24.63″N/126°59′39.11″E |
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| SFC20150918-08 | Jongno-gu, Seoul | 37°34′20.23″N/126°59′44.05″E |
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| SFC20160713-09 | Jeju-si, Jeju-do | 33°29′26.67″N/126°36′08.87″E |
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Notes.
No information.
Figure 1Basidiocarps of Ganoderma; G. sichuanense (A–B), G. cf. adspersum (C–D), G. cf. applanatum (E–F), and G. cf. gibbosum (G–H).
Scale bars: (A–H) = 1 cm.
Figure 2(A) Box plot representing pore number per mm of four Ganoderma species: G. sichuanense (Gsi), G. cf. adspersum (Gad), G. cf. applanatum (Gap), and G. cf. gibbosum (Ggi). Boxes represent the interquartile range between first quartile and third quartile. Bold line in the box is the median and filled circles represent individual outlying data points. (B) Scatter plot of basidiospore size among the four species (mm).
Four samples were observed for each species.
Figure 3Phylogenetic tree for Ganoderma and related species based on a maximum likelihood (ML) analysis of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS), the second largest subunit of RNA polymerase II (rpb2), and translation elongation factor 1-α (tef1-α).
ML trees were constructed with RAxML 8.0.2 using the GTRGAMMA model of evolution and 1,000 bootstrap replicates. Bootstrap scores of >50 are presented at the nodes. Branches that involved SFC sequences are in bold. The scale bar indicates the number of nucleotide substitutions per site.
Figure 4Incorrect names applied to Ganoderma sequences in GenBank.
Color-coded taxon identifiers indicate initial GenBank annotations (number of sequences are in parentheses); “other” indicates annotations labeled as “Ganoderma clone” or as non-Ganoderma genera. Numbers in barred circles represent GenBank submissions that were incorrectly identified as indicated species.