Partial sequence analysis of the actin gene and its potential for studying the phylogeny of Candida species and their teleomorphs
HM Daniel, TC Sorrell and W Meyer Molecular Mycology Laboratory, The University of Sydney/Westmead Hospital, ICPMR, Level 3, Rm 3114A, Darcy Road, Westmead, NSW 2145, Australia The actin gene has been studied as a potential phylogenetic marker for selected members of the anamorphic genus Candida and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology 2001-07, Vol.51 (4), p.1593-1606 |
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Zusammenfassung: | HM Daniel, TC Sorrell and W Meyer
Molecular Mycology Laboratory, The University of Sydney/Westmead Hospital, ICPMR, Level 3, Rm 3114A, Darcy Road, Westmead, NSW 2145, Australia
The actin gene has been studied as a potential phylogenetic marker for
selected members of the anamorphic genus Candida and seven related
teleomorphic genera (Debaryomyces, Issatchenkia, Kluyveromyces,
Saccharomyces and Pichia from the Saccharomycetaceae; Clavispora and
Metschnikowia from the Metschnikowiaceae). The nucleotide sequences of 36
fungal taxa were analysed with respect to their molecular evolution and
phylogenetic relationships. A total of 460 bp (47%) of the coding 979 bp
were variable and 396 bp (40%) of these were found to be phylogenetically
informative. Further analysis of the sequences showed that the genic G+C
contents were higher than the nuclear G+C contents for most of the taxa. A
strong positive correlation was found between G+C content over all codon
positions and third positions. First and second codon positions were
considered to be independent of the genic G+C content. The expected
transition/transversion bias was detected only for third positions.
Pairwise comparisons of transitional and transversional changes
(substitutions) with total percentage sequence divergences revealed that
the third position transitions showed no saturation for ingroup
comparisons. A specific weighting scheme was set up, combining
codon-position weights with change-frequency weights to enable the
inclusion of distant outgroup taxa. Parsimony analyses of the investigated
taxa showed four groups, three of which corresponded to major clusters that
had been established previously in Candida by rDNA analysis.
Interrelationships among the species groups in this heterogeneous
anamorphic genus were determined. The polyphyletic origin of the selected
Candida species and their close associations with several ascomycete genera
were verified and known anamorph/teleomorph pairs confirmed. The actin gene
was established as a valuable phylogenetic marker with the particular
advantage of an unambiguous alignment. |
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ISSN: | 1466-5026 1466-5034 |
DOI: | 10.1099/00207713-51-4-1593 |