Literature DB >> 9828447

Wickerhamiella australiensis, Wickerhamiella cacticola, Wickerhamiella occidentalis, Candida drosophilae and Candida lipophila, five new related yeast species from flowers and associated insects.

M A Lachance1, C A Rosa, W T Starmer, B Schlag-Edler, J S Barker, J M Bowles.   

Abstract

Five new yeast species, Wickerhamiella australiensis, Wickerhamiella cacticola, Wickerhamiella occidentalis, Candida drosophilae and Candida lipophila, are described to accommodate isolates recovered from flowers and floricolous insects of Australian Hibiscus trees, cosmopolitan morning glories (Ipomoea spp.) and Brazilian cereoid cacti. The new Wickerhamiella species are heterothallic, occur in the haploid condition and are clearly separated reproductively from one another. Although they exhibit little physiological variation, they are easily delineated from Wickerhamiella domercqiae, the only species known previously, by their resistance to cycloheximide and the production of strong extracellular lipases. C. drosophilae and C. lipophila share the latter property, but unlike the Wickerhamiella species, they fail to utilize nitrate as sole nitrogen source. PFGE indicates that these yeasts have an unusually low number of chromosomes. The large-subunit rDNA (D1/D2) sequences demonstrate a close relationship between the five species and Candida vanderwaltii and Candida azyma. Their relationship with W. domercqiae is more distant, but all share, with some other Candida species, a single monophyletic clade. The type and isotype strains are as follows: W. australiensis strains UWO(PS)95-604.3T (h+; CBS 8456T) and UWO(PS)95-631.3I (h-; CBS 8457I); W. cacticola strains UFMG96-267T (h+; CBS 8454T) and UFMG96-381I (h-; CBS 8455I); W. occidentalis strains UWO(PS)91-698.4T (h+; CBS 8452T) and UFMG96-212I (h-; CBS 8453I); C. drosophilae UWO(PS)91-716.3T (CBS 8459T); and C. lipophila UWO(PS)91-681.3T (CBS 8458T).

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9828447     DOI: 10.1099/00207713-48-4-1431

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Syst Bacteriol        ISSN: 0020-7713


  2 in total

Review 1.  The ecology of insect-yeast relationships and its relevance to human industry.

Authors:  Anne A Madden; Mary Jane Epps; Tadashi Fukami; Rebecca E Irwin; John Sheppard; D Magdalena Sorger; Robert R Dunn
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2018-03-28       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Presence of yeasts in floral nectar is consistent with the hypothesis of microbial-mediated signaling in plant-pollinator interactions.

Authors:  María I Pozo; Clara de Vega; Azucena Canto; Carlos M Herrera
Journal:  Plant Signal Behav       Date:  2009-11-19
  2 in total

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