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Citation for Study 961

About Citation title: "Phylogenetics of Lophodermium from pine.".
About This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S843 (Status: Published).

Citation

Ortiz-garc?a S., Gernandt D., Stone J., Johnston P., Chapela I., Salas-lizana R., & Alvarez-buylla E. 2003. Phylogenetics of Lophodermium from pine. Mycologia, null.

Authors

  • Ortiz-garc?a S.
  • Gernandt D.
  • Stone J.
  • Johnston P. Phone +64 9 574 4714
  • Chapela I.
  • Salas-lizana R.
  • Alvarez-buylla E.

Abstract

Lophodermium comprises ascomycetous fungi that are both needle cast pathogens and asymptomatic endophytes on a diversity of plant hosts. It is distinguished from other genera in the family Rhytismataceae by its filiform ascospores and ascocarps that open by a longitudinal slit. Nucleotide sequences of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of nuclear ribosomal DNA were used to infer phylogenetic relationships within Lophodermium. Twenty-nine sequences from approximately 11 species of Lophodermium were analyzed together with eight sequences from isolates thought to represent six other genera of Rhytismataceae: Elytroderma, Lirula, Meloderma, Terriera, Tryblidiopsis, and Colpoma. Two putative Meloderma desmazieri isolates occurred within the Lophodermium clade but separate from one another; one grouped with L. indianum, and the other with L. nitens. An isolate of Elytroderma deformans also occurred within the Lophodermium clade, but on a solitary branch. We attribute the occurrence of these genera within the Lophodermium clade to either problems in generic concepts in Rhytismataceae (such as emphasis on spore morphology to delimit genera), or to difficulty of isolating Rhytismataceae needle pathogens from material that is also colonized by Lophodermium. We also evaluated the congruence of host distribution and several morphological characters on the ITS phylogeny. Lophodermium species from pine hosts formed a monophyletic sister group to Lophodermium species from more distant angiosperm hosts from the southern hemisphere but not to L. picea from Picea. The ITS topology indicated that Lophodermium does not show strict cospeciation with pines at deeper branches, although several closely related isolates have closely related hosts. Pathogenic species occupy derived positions in the pine clade suggesting that pathogenicity has evolved from endophytism.

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  • Canonical resource URI: http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S961
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