Comprehensive molecular phylogenetic analysis and evolution of the genus Phyllactinia ( Ascomycota: Erysiphales) and its allied genera
Phyllactinia is a unique genus within the Erysiphales ( Ascomycota) having a partly endo-parasitic nature of the mycelium within the host plant tissues. We constructed phylogenetic trees for the genus Phyllactinia and its allied genera based on a total of 120 nucleotide sequences of the 28S rDNA and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Mycological research 2008-03, Vol.112 (3), p.299-315 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Phyllactinia is a unique genus within the
Erysiphales (
Ascomycota) having a partly endo-parasitic nature of the mycelium within the host plant tissues. We constructed phylogenetic trees for the genus
Phyllactinia and its allied genera based on a total of 120 nucleotide sequences of the 28S rDNA and ITS regions to discuss their phylogenetic relationships with special references to host plants, biogeography, evolutionary dating, and taxonomy. The analysis of the
Erysiphales confirmed the monophyly of the endo-parasitic genera, i.e.
Leveillula,
Phyllactinia, and
Pleochaeta.
Phyllactinia specimens used in this study were divided into six distinctive groups and three subgroups. Interestingly,
Leveillula, an obligately endo-parasitic genus of the
Erysiphales, grouped together with
Phyllactinia, although this was not significantly supported by the Kishino–Hasegawa and Shimodaira–Hasegawa tests. This suggests that the evolution within this group of fungi occurred from partial endo-parasitism to obligate endo-parasitism. The host range of
Phyllactinia is mostly confined to woody plants, especially deciduous trees.
Betulaceae,
Fagaceae,
Ulmaceae,
Moraceae, and
Rosaceae may have close connections to the divergence of the groups and subgroups of
Phyllactinia concerned. Most of these plant families are known as major members of the boreotropical flora of the Tertiary, which suggests an early Tertiary origin of this genus. A comparison of the phylogenies of hosts and parasites revealed that host range expansion at higher taxonomic levels (higher than family level) is independent of the phylogeny of plants. Conversely, host range expansions in lower taxonomic levels (infrafamilial or infrageneric) tend to occur within a single family or genus. An estimation of the evolutionary timing using a molecular clock approach suggested that
Phyllactinia split from
Pleochaeta about 60
M years ago (Ma) in the early Tertiary and divergence of the six major clades of
Phyllactinia occurred between 5 and 40
Ma during the Oligocene and Miocene. Divergence within the major clades and within
Leveillula occurred maybe from more than 5
Ma onwards during the Pliocene and Quaternary. This is the first comprehensive phylogenetic study of
Phyllactinia and other endo-parasitic genera of the
Erysiphales. |
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ISSN: | 0953-7562 1469-8102 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.mycres.2007.11.014 |