@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref24113,
author = {Li Chen and Chunjie Li and Ginger Swoboda and Carolyn Young and Koya Sugawara and Adrian Leuchtmann and Christopher Lewis Schardl},
title = {Two distinct Epichlo? species symbiotic with Achnatherum inebrians, drunken horse grass},
year = {2015},
keywords = {Clavicipitaceae, endophytes, Epichlo? gansuensis, Epichlo? inebrians, ergot alkaloids, genome sequence, grasses, Hypocreales, phylogenetics, rangelands, symbiosis, toxicosis},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {107},
number = {4},
pages = {863--873},
abstract = {Achnatherum inebrians, colloquially known as drunken horse grass, is associated with livestock toxicity in northern China. Epichlo? gansuensis (Eg) has been described from endophyte isolates from A. inebrians in Sunan County, Gansu Province, whereas a morphologically distinct variety, E. gansuensis var. inebrians (Ei), has been described based on two isolates from A. inebrians seeds collected in Urumqi County, Xinjiang Province. Genome sequencing and alkaloid analyses also distinguish these taxa; the Ei isolates produce neurotropic lysergic acid amides (ergot alkaloids), and the Eg isolate produces paxilline (an indole-diterpene alkaloid). To better elucidate the taxonomic diversity of Epichlo? spp. endophytes of A. inebrians, we surveyed eight populations in Xinjiang, Gansu and Inner Mongolia provinces of China, and analyzed their genotypes by multiplex PCR for alkaloid biosynthesis genes and mating-type genes. Genotypes consistent with Ei were present in all eight populations, of which they dominated seven. The Ei isolates were all mating type A and tested positive for the ergot alkaloid gene, dmaW. In contrast, Eg isolates, which were much less common, were all mating type B and possessed the indole-diterpene gene, idtG. The genome was sequenced from an Ei isolate from seeds collected in Xiahe County, Gansu, and compared to that of the varietal ex type isolate from Urumqi. Alkaloid genes and four different housekeeping genes were nearly identical between the two sequenced Ei isolates, and were distinct from a sequenced Eg isolate. Phylogenetic analysis placed Ei, Eg, and Epichlo? sibirica into respective subclades of a clade that emanated from the base of the Epichlo? genus phylogeny. Given its chemotypic, genotypic, morphological and phylogenetic distinctiveness, its widespread occurrence in rangelands of northern China, and its importance in livestock toxicity, we propose to redescribe Ei as Epichlo? inebrians sp. nov.}
}
Citation for Study 16982
Citation title:
"Two distinct Epichlo? species symbiotic with Achnatherum inebrians, drunken horse grass".
Study name:
"Two distinct Epichlo? species symbiotic with Achnatherum inebrians, drunken horse grass".
This study is part of submission 16982
(Status: Published).
Citation
Chen L., Li C., Swoboda G., Young C., Sugawara K., Leuchtmann A., & Schardl C.L. 2015. Two distinct Epichlo? species symbiotic with Achnatherum inebrians, drunken horse grass. Mycologia, 107(4): 863-873.
Authors
-
Chen L.
-
Li C.
-
Swoboda G.
-
Young C.
-
Sugawara K.
-
Leuchtmann A.
-
Schardl C.L.
(submitter)
859-218-0730
Abstract
Achnatherum inebrians, colloquially known as drunken horse grass, is associated with livestock toxicity in northern China. Epichlo? gansuensis (Eg) has been described from endophyte isolates from A. inebrians in Sunan County, Gansu Province, whereas a morphologically distinct variety, E. gansuensis var. inebrians (Ei), has been described based on two isolates from A. inebrians seeds collected in Urumqi County, Xinjiang Province. Genome sequencing and alkaloid analyses also distinguish these taxa; the Ei isolates produce neurotropic lysergic acid amides (ergot alkaloids), and the Eg isolate produces paxilline (an indole-diterpene alkaloid). To better elucidate the taxonomic diversity of Epichlo? spp. endophytes of A. inebrians, we surveyed eight populations in Xinjiang, Gansu and Inner Mongolia provinces of China, and analyzed their genotypes by multiplex PCR for alkaloid biosynthesis genes and mating-type genes. Genotypes consistent with Ei were present in all eight populations, of which they dominated seven. The Ei isolates were all mating type A and tested positive for the ergot alkaloid gene, dmaW. In contrast, Eg isolates, which were much less common, were all mating type B and possessed the indole-diterpene gene, idtG. The genome was sequenced from an Ei isolate from seeds collected in Xiahe County, Gansu, and compared to that of the varietal ex type isolate from Urumqi. Alkaloid genes and four different housekeeping genes were nearly identical between the two sequenced Ei isolates, and were distinct from a sequenced Eg isolate. Phylogenetic analysis placed Ei, Eg, and Epichlo? sibirica into respective subclades of a clade that emanated from the base of the Epichlo? genus phylogeny. Given its chemotypic, genotypic, morphological and phylogenetic distinctiveness, its widespread occurrence in rangelands of northern China, and its importance in livestock toxicity, we propose to redescribe Ei as Epichlo? inebrians sp. nov.
Keywords
Clavicipitaceae, endophytes, Epichlo? gansuensis, Epichlo? inebrians, ergot alkaloids, genome sequence, grasses, Hypocreales, phylogenetics, rangelands, symbiosis, toxicosis
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S16982
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref24113,
author = {Li Chen and Chunjie Li and Ginger Swoboda and Carolyn Young and Koya Sugawara and Adrian Leuchtmann and Christopher Lewis Schardl},
title = {Two distinct Epichlo? species symbiotic with Achnatherum inebrians, drunken horse grass},
year = {2015},
keywords = {Clavicipitaceae, endophytes, Epichlo? gansuensis, Epichlo? inebrians, ergot alkaloids, genome sequence, grasses, Hypocreales, phylogenetics, rangelands, symbiosis, toxicosis},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {107},
number = {4},
pages = {863--873},
abstract = {Achnatherum inebrians, colloquially known as drunken horse grass, is associated with livestock toxicity in northern China. Epichlo? gansuensis (Eg) has been described from endophyte isolates from A. inebrians in Sunan County, Gansu Province, whereas a morphologically distinct variety, E. gansuensis var. inebrians (Ei), has been described based on two isolates from A. inebrians seeds collected in Urumqi County, Xinjiang Province. Genome sequencing and alkaloid analyses also distinguish these taxa; the Ei isolates produce neurotropic lysergic acid amides (ergot alkaloids), and the Eg isolate produces paxilline (an indole-diterpene alkaloid). To better elucidate the taxonomic diversity of Epichlo? spp. endophytes of A. inebrians, we surveyed eight populations in Xinjiang, Gansu and Inner Mongolia provinces of China, and analyzed their genotypes by multiplex PCR for alkaloid biosynthesis genes and mating-type genes. Genotypes consistent with Ei were present in all eight populations, of which they dominated seven. The Ei isolates were all mating type A and tested positive for the ergot alkaloid gene, dmaW. In contrast, Eg isolates, which were much less common, were all mating type B and possessed the indole-diterpene gene, idtG. The genome was sequenced from an Ei isolate from seeds collected in Xiahe County, Gansu, and compared to that of the varietal ex type isolate from Urumqi. Alkaloid genes and four different housekeeping genes were nearly identical between the two sequenced Ei isolates, and were distinct from a sequenced Eg isolate. Phylogenetic analysis placed Ei, Eg, and Epichlo? sibirica into respective subclades of a clade that emanated from the base of the Epichlo? genus phylogeny. Given its chemotypic, genotypic, morphological and phylogenetic distinctiveness, its widespread occurrence in rangelands of northern China, and its importance in livestock toxicity, we propose to redescribe Ei as Epichlo? inebrians sp. nov.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 24113
AU - Chen,Li
AU - Li,Chunjie
AU - Swoboda,Ginger
AU - Young,Carolyn
AU - Sugawara,Koya
AU - Leuchtmann,Adrian
AU - Schardl,Christopher Lewis
T1 - Two distinct Epichlo? species symbiotic with Achnatherum inebrians, drunken horse grass
PY - 2015
KW - Clavicipitaceae
KW - endophytes
KW - Epichlo? gansuensis
KW - Epichlo? inebrians
KW - ergot alkaloids
KW - genome sequence
KW - grasses
KW - Hypocreales
KW - phylogenetics
KW - rangelands
KW - symbiosis
KW - toxicosis
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Achnatherum inebrians, colloquially known as drunken horse grass, is associated with livestock toxicity in northern China. Epichlo? gansuensis (Eg) has been described from endophyte isolates from A. inebrians in Sunan County, Gansu Province, whereas a morphologically distinct variety, E. gansuensis var. inebrians (Ei), has been described based on two isolates from A. inebrians seeds collected in Urumqi County, Xinjiang Province. Genome sequencing and alkaloid analyses also distinguish these taxa; the Ei isolates produce neurotropic lysergic acid amides (ergot alkaloids), and the Eg isolate produces paxilline (an indole-diterpene alkaloid). To better elucidate the taxonomic diversity of Epichlo? spp. endophytes of A. inebrians, we surveyed eight populations in Xinjiang, Gansu and Inner Mongolia provinces of China, and analyzed their genotypes by multiplex PCR for alkaloid biosynthesis genes and mating-type genes. Genotypes consistent with Ei were present in all eight populations, of which they dominated seven. The Ei isolates were all mating type A and tested positive for the ergot alkaloid gene, dmaW. In contrast, Eg isolates, which were much less common, were all mating type B and possessed the indole-diterpene gene, idtG. The genome was sequenced from an Ei isolate from seeds collected in Xiahe County, Gansu, and compared to that of the varietal ex type isolate from Urumqi. Alkaloid genes and four different housekeeping genes were nearly identical between the two sequenced Ei isolates, and were distinct from a sequenced Eg isolate. Phylogenetic analysis placed Ei, Eg, and Epichlo? sibirica into respective subclades of a clade that emanated from the base of the Epichlo? genus phylogeny. Given its chemotypic, genotypic, morphological and phylogenetic distinctiveness, its widespread occurrence in rangelands of northern China, and its importance in livestock toxicity, we propose to redescribe Ei as Epichlo? inebrians sp. nov.
L3 -
JF - Mycologia
VL - 107
IS - 4
SP - 863
EP - 873
ER -