Inter- and Intra-Continental Genetic Variation in the Generalist Conifer Wood Saprobic Fungus Phlebiopsis gigantea
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2021
Abstract:
Phlebiopsis gigantea (Fr.) Jülich is a well-known generalist conifer wood saprobe and a
biocontrol fungus used in several world countries to prevent stump infection by tree pathogenic
Heterobasidion fungal species. Previous studies have reported the presence of regional and continental
genetic differentiation in host-specific fungi, but the presence of such differentiation for generalist
wood saprobes such as P. gigantea has not been often studied or demonstrated. Additionally,
little information exists on the distribution of this fungus in western North America. The main
purposes of this study were: (I) to assess the presence of P. gigantea in California, (II) to explore
the genetic variability of P. gigantea at the intra and inter-continental levels and (III) to analyze the
phylogeographic relationships between American and European populations. Seven loci (nrITS,
ML5–ML6, ATP6, RPB1, RPB2, GPD and TEF1-a) from 26 isolates of P. gigantea from coniferous
forests in diverse geographic distribution and from different hosts were analyzed in this study
together with 45 GenBank sequences. One hundred seventy-four new sequences were generated
using either universal or specific primers designed in this study. The mitochondrial ML5–ML6 DNA
and ATP6 regions were highly conserved and did not show differences between any of the isolates.
Conversely, DNA sequences from the ITS, RPB1, RPB2, GPD and TEF1-a loci were variable among
samples. Maximum likelihood analysis of GPD and TEF1-a strongly supported the presences of two
different subgroups within the species but without congruence or geographic partition, suggesting
the presence of retained ancestral polymorphisms. RPB1 and RPB2 sequences separated European
isolates from American ones, while the GPD locus separated western North American samples from
eastern North American ones. This study reports the presence of P. gigantea in California for the first
time using DNA-based confirmation and identifies two older genetically distinct subspecific groups,
as well as three genetically differentiated lineages within the species: one from Europe, one from
eastern North America and one from California, with the latter presumably including individuals
from the rest of western North America. The genetic differentiation identified here among P. gigantea
individuals from coniferous forests from different world regions indicates that European isolates
of this fungus should not be used in North America (or vice versa), and, likewise, commercially
available eastern North American P. gigantea isolates should not be used in western North America
forests. The reported lack of host specificity of P. gigantea was documented by the field survey and
further reinforces the need to only use local isolates of this biocontrol fungus, given that genetically
distinct exotic genotypes of a broad generalist microbe may easily spread and permanently alter the
microbial biodiversity of native forest ecosystems.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
exons; introns; phylogeography; sequence-based
Elenco autori:
Dovana, Francesco; Gonthier, Paolo; Garbelotto, Matteo
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