| Literature DB >> 31560606 |
Janusz Błaszkowski1, Piotr Niezgoda1, Marcin Piątek2, Franco Magurno3, Monika Malicka4, Szymon Zubek5, Piotr Mleczko5, Nourou S Yorou6, Khadija Jobim7, Xochtil Margarito Vista7, Juliana L R Lima7, Bruno Tomio Goto7.
Abstract
We examined three arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF; phylum Glomeromycota) producing glomoid spores. The mode of formation and morphology of these spores suggested that they represent undescribed species in the genus Rhizoglomus of the family Glomeraceae. Subsequent morphological studies of the spores and molecular phylogenetic analyses of sequences of the nuc rDNA small subunit (18S), internal transcribed spacer (ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 = ITS), and large subunit (28S) region (= 18S-ITS-28S) confirmed the suggestion and indicated that the fungi strongly differ from all previously described Rhizoglomus species with known DNA barcodes. Consequently, the fungi were described here as new species: R. dalpeae, R. maiae, and R. silesianum. Two of these species lived hypogeously in the field in habitats subjected to strong environmental stresses. Rhizoglomus dalpeae originated from an inselberg located within Guineo-Sudanian transition savanna zone in Benin, West Africa, where the temperature of the inselberg rock during a 5-mo drought ranges from 40 to 60 C. Rhizoglomus silesianum originated from a coal mine spoil heap in Poland, whose substrate is extremely poor in nutrients, has unfavorable texture, and may heat up to 50 C. By contrast, R. maiae was found in more favorable habitat conditions. It produced an epigeous cluster of spores among shrubs growing in a tropical humid reserve in Brazil. Moreover, the compatibility of phylogenies of species of the family Glomeraceae reconstructed from analyses of sequences of 18S-ITS-28S and the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II (RPB1) gene was discussed.Entities:
Keywords: 18S-ITS-28S nuc rDNA; 3 new taxa; Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; Glomeromycota; RPB1; molecular phylogeny; morphology
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31560606 DOI: 10.1080/00275514.2019.1654637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycologia ISSN: 0027-5514 Impact factor: 2.696