Phylogenetic species recognition reveals host-specific lineages among poplar rust fungi
VIALLE, Agathe
Laurentian Forestry Centre
Centre d'Etude de la Forêt [Faculté de foresterie, de géographie et de géomatique]
Institut de Biologie Intégrative et des Systèmes [IBIS]
See more >
Laurentian Forestry Centre
Centre d'Etude de la Forêt [Faculté de foresterie, de géographie et de géomatique]
Institut de Biologie Intégrative et des Systèmes [IBIS]
VIALLE, Agathe
Laurentian Forestry Centre
Centre d'Etude de la Forêt [Faculté de foresterie, de géographie et de géomatique]
Institut de Biologie Intégrative et des Systèmes [IBIS]
Laurentian Forestry Centre
Centre d'Etude de la Forêt [Faculté de foresterie, de géographie et de géomatique]
Institut de Biologie Intégrative et des Systèmes [IBIS]
BERNIER, Louis
Centre d'Etude de la Forêt [Faculté de foresterie, de géographie et de géomatique]
Institut de Biologie Intégrative et des Systèmes [IBIS]
< Reduce
Centre d'Etude de la Forêt [Faculté de foresterie, de géographie et de géomatique]
Institut de Biologie Intégrative et des Systèmes [IBIS]
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 2013, vol. 66, n° 3, p. 628 - 644
Elsevier
English Abstract
Fungal species belonging to the genus Melampsora (Basidiomycota, Pucciniales) comprise rust pathogens that alternate between Salicaceae and other plant hosts. Species delineation and identification are difficult within ...Read more >
Fungal species belonging to the genus Melampsora (Basidiomycota, Pucciniales) comprise rust pathogens that alternate between Salicaceae and other plant hosts. Species delineation and identification are difficult within this group due to the paucity of observable morphological features. Several Melampsora rusts are highly host-specific and this feature has been used for identification at the species level. However, this criterion is not always reliable since different Melampsora rust species can overlap on one host but specialize on a different one. To date, two different species recognition methods are used to recognize and define species within the Melampsora genus: (i) morphological species recognition, which is based solely on morphological criteria; and (ii) ecological species recognition, which combines morphological criteria with host range to recognize and define species. In order to clarify species recognition within the Melampsora genus, we applied phylogenetic species recognition to Melampsora poplar rusts by conducting molecular phylogenetic analyses on 15 Melampsora taxa using six nuclear and mitochondrial loci. By assessing the genealogical concordance between phylogenies, we identified 12 lineages that evolved independently, corresponding to distinct phylogenetic species. All 12 lineages were concordant with host specialization, but only three belonged to strictly defined morphological species. The estimation of the species tree obtained with Bayesian concordance analysis highlighted a potential co-evolutionary history between Melampsora species and their reciprocal aecial host plants. Within the Melampsora speciation process, aecial host may have had a strong effect on ancestral evolution, whereas telial host specificity seems to have evolved more recently. The morphological characters initially used to define species boundaries in the Melampsora genus are not reflective of the evolutionary and genetic relationships among poplar rusts. In order to construct a more meaningful taxonomy, host specificity must be considered an important criterion for delineating and describing species within the genus Melampsora as previously suggested by ecological species recognition.Read less <
Keywords
Melampsora
English Keywords
host-pathogen co-evolution
genealogical concordance phylogenetic species recognition
bayesian concordance analysis
phylogenetic species
Origin
Hal imported