@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref23790,
author = {Sylvia Klaubauf and Didier Tharreau and Elisabeth Fournier and Johannes (Ewald) Zacharias Groenewald and Pedro W. Crous and Ronald P de Vries and Marc-Henri Lebrun},
title = {Resolving the polyphyletic nature of Pyricularia (Pyriculariaceae)},
year = {2014},
keywords = {Magnaporthaceae, Magnaporthe, Pyricularia, Pyriculariaceae, phylogeny, systematics},
doi = {10.1016/j.simyco.2014.09.004},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166061614000104},
pmid = {},
journal = {Studies in Mycology},
volume = {79},
number = {},
pages = {85--120},
abstract = {Species of Pyricularia (magnaporthe-like sexual morphs) are responsible for major diseases on grasses. Pyricularia oryzae (sexual morph Magnaporthe oryzae) is responsible for the major disease of rice called rice blast disease, and foliar diseases of wheat and millet, while Pyricularia grisea (sexual morph Magnaporthe grisea) is responsible for foliar diseases of Digitaria. Magnaporthe salvinii, M. poae and M. rhizophila produce asexual spores that differ from those of Pyricularia sensu stricto that has pyriform, 2-septate conidia produced on conidiophores with sympodial proliferation. Magnaporthe salvinii was recently allocated to Nakataea, while M. poae and M. rhizophila were placed in Magnaporthiopsis. To clarify the taxonomic relationships among species that are magnaporthe- or pyricularia-like in morphology, we analysed phylogenetic relationships from isolates representing a wide range of host plants by using partial DNA sequences of multiple genes such as LSU, ITS, RPB1, actin and calmodulin. Species of Pyricularia s. str. belong to a monophyletic clade that includes all P. oryzae/P. grisea isolates tested, defining the Pyriculariaceae, which is sister to the Ophioceraceae, representing two novel families. These clades are clearly distinct from species belonging to the Gaeumannomyces pro parte/Magnaporthiopsis/Nakataea generic complex that are monophyletic and define the Magnaporthaceae. A few magnaporthe- and pyricularia-like species are unrelated to Magnaporthaceae and Pyriculariaceae. Pyricularia oryzae/P. grisea isolates cluster into two related clades. Isolates sampled on host plants such as Eleusine, Oryza, Setaria or Triticum were exclusively clustering in the P. oryzae clade, while isolates from host plants such as Cenchrus, Echinochloa, Lolium, Pennisetum or Zingiber belong to different Pyricularia species. This demonstrates that host range cannot be used as taxonomic criterion without extensive pathotyping. Our results show that the typical pyriform, 2-septate conidium morphology of P. grisea/ P. oryzae is restricted to Pyricularia and Neopyricularia, while most other genera have obclavate to more ellipsoid 2-septate conidia. Some related genera (Deightoniella, Macgarvieomyces) have evolved 1-septate conidia. Therefore, conidium morphology cannot be used as taxonomic criterion at generic level without phylogenetic data. We also identified 10 novel genera, and seven novel species. A re-evaluation of generic and species concepts within Pyriculariaceae is presented, and novelties are proposed based on morphological and phylogenetic data.}
}
Citation for Study 16543
Citation title:
"Resolving the polyphyletic nature of Pyricularia (Pyriculariaceae)".
Study name:
"Resolving the polyphyletic nature of Pyricularia (Pyriculariaceae)".
This study is part of submission 16543
(Status: Published).
Citation
Klaubauf S., Tharreau D., Fournier E., Groenewald J.Z., Crous P.W., De vries R.P., & Lebrun M. 2014. Resolving the polyphyletic nature of Pyricularia (Pyriculariaceae). Studies in Mycology, 79: 85-120.
Authors
-
Klaubauf S.
-
Tharreau D.
-
Fournier E.
-
Groenewald J.Z.
(submitter)
+31302122600
-
Crous P.W.
-
De vries R.P.
-
Lebrun M.
Abstract
Species of Pyricularia (magnaporthe-like sexual morphs) are responsible for major diseases on grasses. Pyricularia oryzae (sexual morph Magnaporthe oryzae) is responsible for the major disease of rice called rice blast disease, and foliar diseases of wheat and millet, while Pyricularia grisea (sexual morph Magnaporthe grisea) is responsible for foliar diseases of Digitaria. Magnaporthe salvinii, M. poae and M. rhizophila produce asexual spores that differ from those of Pyricularia sensu stricto that has pyriform, 2-septate conidia produced on conidiophores with sympodial proliferation. Magnaporthe salvinii was recently allocated to Nakataea, while M. poae and M. rhizophila were placed in Magnaporthiopsis. To clarify the taxonomic relationships among species that are magnaporthe- or pyricularia-like in morphology, we analysed phylogenetic relationships from isolates representing a wide range of host plants by using partial DNA sequences of multiple genes such as LSU, ITS, RPB1, actin and calmodulin. Species of Pyricularia s. str. belong to a monophyletic clade that includes all P. oryzae/P. grisea isolates tested, defining the Pyriculariaceae, which is sister to the Ophioceraceae, representing two novel families. These clades are clearly distinct from species belonging to the Gaeumannomyces pro parte/Magnaporthiopsis/Nakataea generic complex that are monophyletic and define the Magnaporthaceae. A few magnaporthe- and pyricularia-like species are unrelated to Magnaporthaceae and Pyriculariaceae. Pyricularia oryzae/P. grisea isolates cluster into two related clades. Isolates sampled on host plants such as Eleusine, Oryza, Setaria or Triticum were exclusively clustering in the P. oryzae clade, while isolates from host plants such as Cenchrus, Echinochloa, Lolium, Pennisetum or Zingiber belong to different Pyricularia species. This demonstrates that host range cannot be used as taxonomic criterion without extensive pathotyping. Our results show that the typical pyriform, 2-septate conidium morphology of P. grisea/ P. oryzae is restricted to Pyricularia and Neopyricularia, while most other genera have obclavate to more ellipsoid 2-septate conidia. Some related genera (Deightoniella, Macgarvieomyces) have evolved 1-septate conidia. Therefore, conidium morphology cannot be used as taxonomic criterion at generic level without phylogenetic data. We also identified 10 novel genera, and seven novel species. A re-evaluation of generic and species concepts within Pyriculariaceae is presented, and novelties are proposed based on morphological and phylogenetic data.
Keywords
Magnaporthaceae, Magnaporthe, Pyricularia, Pyriculariaceae, phylogeny, systematics
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S16543
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref23790,
author = {Sylvia Klaubauf and Didier Tharreau and Elisabeth Fournier and Johannes (Ewald) Zacharias Groenewald and Pedro W. Crous and Ronald P de Vries and Marc-Henri Lebrun},
title = {Resolving the polyphyletic nature of Pyricularia (Pyriculariaceae)},
year = {2014},
keywords = {Magnaporthaceae, Magnaporthe, Pyricularia, Pyriculariaceae, phylogeny, systematics},
doi = {10.1016/j.simyco.2014.09.004},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166061614000104},
pmid = {},
journal = {Studies in Mycology},
volume = {79},
number = {},
pages = {85--120},
abstract = {Species of Pyricularia (magnaporthe-like sexual morphs) are responsible for major diseases on grasses. Pyricularia oryzae (sexual morph Magnaporthe oryzae) is responsible for the major disease of rice called rice blast disease, and foliar diseases of wheat and millet, while Pyricularia grisea (sexual morph Magnaporthe grisea) is responsible for foliar diseases of Digitaria. Magnaporthe salvinii, M. poae and M. rhizophila produce asexual spores that differ from those of Pyricularia sensu stricto that has pyriform, 2-septate conidia produced on conidiophores with sympodial proliferation. Magnaporthe salvinii was recently allocated to Nakataea, while M. poae and M. rhizophila were placed in Magnaporthiopsis. To clarify the taxonomic relationships among species that are magnaporthe- or pyricularia-like in morphology, we analysed phylogenetic relationships from isolates representing a wide range of host plants by using partial DNA sequences of multiple genes such as LSU, ITS, RPB1, actin and calmodulin. Species of Pyricularia s. str. belong to a monophyletic clade that includes all P. oryzae/P. grisea isolates tested, defining the Pyriculariaceae, which is sister to the Ophioceraceae, representing two novel families. These clades are clearly distinct from species belonging to the Gaeumannomyces pro parte/Magnaporthiopsis/Nakataea generic complex that are monophyletic and define the Magnaporthaceae. A few magnaporthe- and pyricularia-like species are unrelated to Magnaporthaceae and Pyriculariaceae. Pyricularia oryzae/P. grisea isolates cluster into two related clades. Isolates sampled on host plants such as Eleusine, Oryza, Setaria or Triticum were exclusively clustering in the P. oryzae clade, while isolates from host plants such as Cenchrus, Echinochloa, Lolium, Pennisetum or Zingiber belong to different Pyricularia species. This demonstrates that host range cannot be used as taxonomic criterion without extensive pathotyping. Our results show that the typical pyriform, 2-septate conidium morphology of P. grisea/ P. oryzae is restricted to Pyricularia and Neopyricularia, while most other genera have obclavate to more ellipsoid 2-septate conidia. Some related genera (Deightoniella, Macgarvieomyces) have evolved 1-septate conidia. Therefore, conidium morphology cannot be used as taxonomic criterion at generic level without phylogenetic data. We also identified 10 novel genera, and seven novel species. A re-evaluation of generic and species concepts within Pyriculariaceae is presented, and novelties are proposed based on morphological and phylogenetic data.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 23790
AU - Klaubauf,Sylvia
AU - Tharreau,Didier
AU - Fournier,Elisabeth
AU - Groenewald, Johannes (Ewald) Zacharias
AU - Crous,Pedro W.
AU - de Vries,Ronald P
AU - Lebrun,Marc-Henri
T1 - Resolving the polyphyletic nature of Pyricularia (Pyriculariaceae)
PY - 2014
KW - Magnaporthaceae
KW - Magnaporthe
KW - Pyricularia
KW - Pyriculariaceae
KW - phylogeny
KW - systematics
UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166061614000104
N2 - Species of Pyricularia (magnaporthe-like sexual morphs) are responsible for major diseases on grasses. Pyricularia oryzae (sexual morph Magnaporthe oryzae) is responsible for the major disease of rice called rice blast disease, and foliar diseases of wheat and millet, while Pyricularia grisea (sexual morph Magnaporthe grisea) is responsible for foliar diseases of Digitaria. Magnaporthe salvinii, M. poae and M. rhizophila produce asexual spores that differ from those of Pyricularia sensu stricto that has pyriform, 2-septate conidia produced on conidiophores with sympodial proliferation. Magnaporthe salvinii was recently allocated to Nakataea, while M. poae and M. rhizophila were placed in Magnaporthiopsis. To clarify the taxonomic relationships among species that are magnaporthe- or pyricularia-like in morphology, we analysed phylogenetic relationships from isolates representing a wide range of host plants by using partial DNA sequences of multiple genes such as LSU, ITS, RPB1, actin and calmodulin. Species of Pyricularia s. str. belong to a monophyletic clade that includes all P. oryzae/P. grisea isolates tested, defining the Pyriculariaceae, which is sister to the Ophioceraceae, representing two novel families. These clades are clearly distinct from species belonging to the Gaeumannomyces pro parte/Magnaporthiopsis/Nakataea generic complex that are monophyletic and define the Magnaporthaceae. A few magnaporthe- and pyricularia-like species are unrelated to Magnaporthaceae and Pyriculariaceae. Pyricularia oryzae/P. grisea isolates cluster into two related clades. Isolates sampled on host plants such as Eleusine, Oryza, Setaria or Triticum were exclusively clustering in the P. oryzae clade, while isolates from host plants such as Cenchrus, Echinochloa, Lolium, Pennisetum or Zingiber belong to different Pyricularia species. This demonstrates that host range cannot be used as taxonomic criterion without extensive pathotyping. Our results show that the typical pyriform, 2-septate conidium morphology of P. grisea/ P. oryzae is restricted to Pyricularia and Neopyricularia, while most other genera have obclavate to more ellipsoid 2-septate conidia. Some related genera (Deightoniella, Macgarvieomyces) have evolved 1-septate conidia. Therefore, conidium morphology cannot be used as taxonomic criterion at generic level without phylogenetic data. We also identified 10 novel genera, and seven novel species. A re-evaluation of generic and species concepts within Pyriculariaceae is presented, and novelties are proposed based on morphological and phylogenetic data.
L3 - 10.1016/j.simyco.2014.09.004
JF - Studies in Mycology
VL - 79
IS -
SP - 85
EP - 120
ER -