Publication | Closed Access
Loss of meiosis in Aspergillus
138
Citations
32
References
1996
Year
Fungal Cell BiologyGeneticsMolecular GeneticsDna SequencesGenomicsReproductive BiologyPhylogenetic AnalysisFungal Developmental BiologyPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyFungal BiologyFungal ReproductionCell DivisionMeiosisBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyFungal EvolutionRibosomal GeneRecent DerivativesFungal SystematicsSymbiosisMedicine
If strictly mitotic asexual fungi lack recombination, the conventional view predicts that they are recent derivatives from older meiotic lineages. We tested this by inferring phylogenetic relationships among closely related meiotic and strictly mitotic taxa with Aspergillus conidial (mitotic) states. Phylogenies were constructed by using DNA sequences from the mitochondrial small ribosomal subunit, the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacers, and the nuclear 5.8S ribosomal gene. Over 920 bp of sequence was analyzed for each taxon. Phylogenetic analysis of both the mitochondrial and nuclear data sets showed at least four clades that possess both meiotic and strictly mitotic taxa. These results support the hypothesis that strictly mitotic lineages arise frequently from more ancient meiotic lineages with Aspergillus conidial states. Many of the strictly mitotic species examined retained characters that may be vestiges of a meiotic state, including the production of sclerotia, sclerotium-like structures, and hülle cells.
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