• Title/Summary/Keyword: Molecular Phylogeny

Search Result 434, Processing Time 0.027 seconds

Morphology, Phylogeny and Ecology of Hyphomycetes Hyperparasitic to Rusts

  • Park, Mi-Jeong;Park, Jong-Han;Hong, Seung-Beom;Shin, Hyeon-Dong
    • 한국균학회소식:학술대회논문집
    • /
    • 2015.05a
    • /
    • pp.55-55
    • /
    • 2015
  • Rust is one of the most destructive diseases on economically important plants such as agricultural and horticultural crops, as well as forest trees [1]. Chemical treatment is the most effective means to control rust, but use of the chemical fungicides involves inevitable risks to human health and environment [2]. Unfortunately, biocontrol is currently impracticable for rust disease management [3]. It is necessary to exploit biocontrol agents to help prevent rust diseases. As a fundamental research for future development of biocontrol agents for rusts, biodiversity of hyperparasites occurring on rust fungi was investigated. During 2006-2010, 197 fungal isolates of the rust hyperparasites were collected and isolated from various combinations of mycohosts and plant hosts in many regions of Korea. Based on morphological and molecular data, they were identified as 8 genera and 12 species. Besides, phylogenetic relationships between the hyperparasites and related taxa were inferred. A total of 114 isolates of Pseudovirgaria were obtained from rust pustules of Phragmidium spp. and Pucciniastrum agrimoniae infecting rosaceous plants. Phylogenetic analysis using multigene sequences revealed a high level of genetic variability among many isolates of Pseudovirgaria and close correlation between the isolates and mycohosts. Only two species of Pseudovirgaria, P. hyperparasitica and P. grisea are often difficult to distinguish by their morphological similarity, but on the molecular basis they were clearly differentiated from each other. There had been no previous record of P. grisea outside Europe, but the present study has proved its presence in Korea. Among six distinct groups (five of P. hyperparasitica and one of P. grisea) within the Pseudovirgaria isolates, each lineage of P. hyperparasitica was closely associated with specific mycohosts and thus might have cospeciated with their mycohosts, which probably led to coevolution. Although P. grisea possesses a host preference for Phragmidium species occurring on Rubus, it was not specific for a mycohost. P. grisea seems to evolve in the direction of having a broad mycohost range. Seventeen isolates of Verticillium-like fungi were isolated from rust sori. Based on morphological data and DNA sequence analysis, the isolates were identified as three Lecanicillium species, viz. L. attenuatum, Lecanicillium sp. 1, Lecanicillium sp. 2, and V. epiphytum. The unidenified two species of Lecanicillium appear to be previously unknown taxa. Sixty-six isolates of miscellaneous hyphomycetes belonging to 6 species of 5 genera were obtained from pustules of rust fungi. On the basis of morphological and molecular analyses, the miscellaneous hyphomycetes growing on rusts were identified as Acrodontium crateriforme, Cladophialophora pucciniophila, Cladosporium cladosporioides, Phacellium vossianum, Ramularia coleosporii, and R. uredinicola.

  • PDF

Phylogenetic position of five Korean strains of Alexandrium tamarense(Dinophyceae), based on internal transcribed spacers ITS1 and ITS2 including nuclear-encoded 5.85 rRNA gene sequences (ITS 부위에 근거한 한국산 Alexandrium tamarense 5 클론의 계통분류학적 위치)

  • Cho, Eun-Seob;Lee, Sam-Geun;Kim, Ik-Soo
    • Journal of Life Science
    • /
    • v.12 no.6
    • /
    • pp.821-834
    • /
    • 2002
  • In order to measure the inter- and intraspecific genetic divergences within the genus Alexandrium, the variations within the internal transcribed spacer (ITS1 and ITS2) regions and 5.85 ribosomal RNA gene of eight Alexandrium species were examined for 33 strains from diverse geographical locations by direct sequencing. Five isolates of A. tamarense (AT-2, AT-6, AT-10, AT-A and AT-B) from Jinhae Bay, Korea were found to be completely identical to a Japanese strain OFX151-A. The length of the amplified ITSI-5.85-ITS2 region varied from 481 nucleotides (in A. margalefi) to 528 nucleotides (in A. affine CU1-1). ITS1 and ITS2 nucleotide lengths were negatively correlated, whereas a positive correlation was found between their G+C content. The degree of sequence divergence ranged from 0.3% (1 bp) to a maximum of 53% (305 Up). Pairwise sequence comparisons revealed a small degree of divergence between A. tamarense and A. Pundyense isolates (1.2 - 2.3% = 6-12 bp), but a high degree of divergence between A. tamarense and A. catenella (19.8% = 102 bp), and between A. catenella and A. Pundyense (19.7%). Although most nodes were weakly supported by bootstrap values, some types tend to form independent molecular groups. A. catenella isolates also formed an independent molecular sub-group, with relaticula strong bootstrap values (94% or 85% and 79% or 98%, respectively in PAUP and NJ trees). Interestingly, A. cohorticula and A. frateculus always clustered within the same sub-group, this result being supported by strong bootstrap values. Our results indicate that the ITS regions provide useful informations on hierarchical population genetic structure and a high phylogenetic resolution in intraspecific and interspecific Alexandrium population.

Phylogeny Study of Genus Pelvetia in Korea by Internal Transcribed Spacer Sequence (ITS) (ITS에 의한 한국 내 Pelvetia속 분류군의 계통학적 연구)

  • Lee, Bok-Kyu;Huh, Man-Kyu;Choi, Joo-Soo;Cho, Sung-Hyun
    • Journal of Life Science
    • /
    • v.19 no.3
    • /
    • pp.311-316
    • /
    • 2009
  • The brown algae, or phaeophytes, are a large group of multicellular algae, including many notable types of seaweed. We analysed intra- and interspecific phylogenic studies within the genus Pelvetia in Korea and compared them with results of both same and different species in GenBank. The sequences for P. babingtonii in Korea were generally similar to those for P. babingtonii AF102957, and the sequences of P. siliquosa in Korea were also similar to those of P. siliquosa AF102958. Sequence variation within the Pelvetia is mostly due to nucleotide substitutions, although several small indels and some large indels can be found. Another source of sequence divergence is length variation due to stretches of short repeats that occur at the ITS1 or ITS2 in all the Pelvetia. NJ analysis consists mainly of two clades. One of them contains P. canaliculata and P. limitata, and is sister to the rest of the genus (P. siliquosa, P. compressa, and P. babingtonii). P. babingtonii is not grouped one clade. In the MP analysis, ten accessions or populations were fully resolved and all accessions from the same species formed with 99% or 100% bootstrap supports.

A systematic study of Glechoma L. (Lamiaceae) based on micromorphological characters and nuclear ribosomal ITS sequences (미세구조학적 형질 및 핵 리보솜 DNA의 ITS 염기서열에 의한 긴병꽃풀속(꿀풀과)의 계통분류학적 연구)

  • Jang, Tae-Soo;Lee, Joongku;Hong, Suk-Pyo
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
    • /
    • v.44 no.1
    • /
    • pp.22-32
    • /
    • 2014
  • The petal and sepal micromorphology of five species of Glechoma (Lamiaceae) was investigated to evaluate their taxonomic significance, and a molecular phylogeny using the sequences of internal transcribed spacers (ITS) regions of nuclear ribosomal DNA was carried out to resolve their phylogenetic relationships. Stomatal complexes were mostly found in the inner and outer part of the sepal from all investigated taxa, and the size length of the guard cell was variable among the taxa. Five types of trichomes (uni-cellular non-glandular trichome, multi-cellular non-glandular trichome, short-stalked capitate glandular trichome, long-stalked capitate glandular trichome, and peltate glandular trichome) were variable among the taxa as well as their distribution and density. In molecular phylogenetic studies, the genus Glechoma was composed of three geographically distinct major monophyletic groups (Europe-U.S.A., China-Korea, Japan). G. longituba in Korea and China formed well-supported monophyletic group. G. hederacea in Europe and U.S.A. formed a monophyletic and well-supported clade with G. sardoa, which are endemic species in Italy, with G. hirsuta falling as a sister to this clade. However, G. grandis did not form any phylogenetic relationships with the remaining taxa. The ITS analyses provided taxonomic boundaries of taxa in Glechoma although the petal and sepal micromorphological characters provided weak evidences of the systematic value. As further studies, incorporating more DNA regions to the matrix including other additional morphological analysis will be significant to provide clearer taxonomic structure in Glechoma.

Molecular epidemiology of Aleutian mink disease virus causing outbreaks in mink farms from Southwestern Europe: a retrospective study from 2012 to 2019

  • Prieto, Alberto;Fernandez-Antonio, Ricardo;Lopez-Lorenzo, Gonzalo;Diaz-Cao, Jose Manuel;Lopez-Novo, Cynthia;Remesar, Susana;Panadero, Rosario;Diaz, Pablo;Morrondo, Patrocinio;Diez-Banos, Pablo;Fernandez, Gonzalo
    • Journal of Veterinary Science
    • /
    • v.21 no.4
    • /
    • pp.65.1-65.13
    • /
    • 2020
  • Background: Aleutian mink disease virus (AMDV) causes major economic losses in fur-bearing animal production. The control of most AMDV outbreaks is complex due to the difficulties of establishing the source of infection based only on the available on-farm epidemiological data. In this sense, phylogenetic analysis of the strains present in a farm may help elucidate the origin of the infection and improve the control and biosecurity measures. Objectives: This study had the following aims: characterize the AMDV strains from most outbreaks produced at Spanish farms between 2012-2019 at the molecular level, and assess the utility of the combined use of molecular and epidemiological data to track the possible routes of infection. Methods: Thirty-seven strains from 17 farms were partially sequenced for the NS1 and VP2 genes and analyzed phylogenetically with other strains described worldwide. Results: Spanish AMDV strains are clustered in four major clades that generally show a good geographical correlation, confirming that most had been established in Spain a long time ago. The combined study of phylogenetic results and epidemiological information of each farm suggests that most of the AMDV outbreaks since 2012 had been produced by within-farm reservoirs, while a few of them may have been due to the introduction of the virus through international trade. Conclusions: The combination of phylogenetic inference, together with epidemiological data, helps assess the possible origin of AMDV infections in mink farms and improving the control and prevention of this disease.

Analysis of Genetic Variation in the Small Subunit Ribosomal RNA Gene of Euplotes Ciliates for Developing Species Diagnostic Molecular Marker (종 식별 분자 마커 개발을 위한 섬모충류 Euplotes의 small subunit ribosomal RNA 변이성 분석)

  • Kim, Sun-Young;Kim, Se-Joo;Min, Gi-Sik;Yang, Eun-Jin;Yoo, Man-Ho;Choi, Joong-Ki
    • The Sea:JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN SOCIETY OF OCEANOGRAPHY
    • /
    • v.12 no.3
    • /
    • pp.225-233
    • /
    • 2007
  • To verify which loop regions of 18S rRNA gene are suitable as species-specific genetic markers in ciliates, we analyzed the genetic variation of 18S rRNA gene among 9 Euplotes species (Hypotrichia : Ciliophora). In our result, no inter-specific variation was detected from V1, V3 and V5 regions, and the length of V7 and V8 are 44 bp and 79 bp, respectively, which are too short to make genetic marker. In contrast, V2 and V4 may be good candidate segments of species-specific diagnostic molecular markers because these two regions are most variable ($1.75{\sim}20.61%$) and showed good inter-specific phylogeny. Furthermore, the sequences of V2 and V4 are 123 bp and 306 bp, respectively in length which are enough to make species-specific marker.

Phylogeny of Desmodesmus (Scenedesmaceae, Chlorophyceae) in Korea based on multigene data analysis (다유전자 분석을 통한 한국산 녹조류 Desmodesmus속의 계통)

  • Yeong Chae Yoo;Nam-Ju Lee;Ga Yeong Jeon;Ok-Min Lee;Eun Chan Yang
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
    • /
    • v.41 no.4
    • /
    • pp.345-363
    • /
    • 2023
  • The genus Desmodesmus (Chodat) S.S. An, T. Friedl & E. Hegewald is ubiquitous in freshwater ecosystems, such as rivers, ponds, and wetlands. The actual species diversity and distribution of the genus is unknown because of morphological plasticity affected by habitats. Currently, 38 Desmodesmus species have been reported in Korea most of which transferred from the genus Scenedesmus recently, however, no phylogenetic relationships have been studied yet. Despite the challenges in analyzing relationships among Desmodesmus species through the morphology, ecology, and original description, this study focused on examining species-level relationships using the FBCC culture strains isolated from Korea. A total of 299 sequences (66 of 18S rRNA, 47 of atpB, 67 of petA, 52 of rbcL, and 67 of tufA) were newly determined and used for phylogenetic analysis. Four plastid genes tend to have higher variation than 18S rRNA in the variable sites and P-distance. From the combined phylogeny, the Desmodesmus included six clades such as Clade-1: D. pseudoserratus and D. serratus, Clade-2: D. communis, D. dispar, D. maximus, D. pannonicus, unidentified Desmodesmus sp., Clade-3: D. bicaudatus and D. intermedius, Clade-4: D. microspina, D. multivariablis, D. pleiomorphus, D. subspicatus, Clade-5: D. abundans, D. kissii, and D. spinosus, and Clade-6: D. armatus, D. armatus var. longispina, D. opoliensis, unidentified Desmodesmus spp. The new sequence data from FBCC strains will be used to identify species and study the molecular ecology of scenedesmacean green algae in freshwater ecosystems. The phylogenetic information from this study will expand our understanding of Desmodesmus species diversity in Korea.

Molecular Phylogenetic Analysis of HIV -1 vif Gene from Korean Isolates

  • Park, Chan-Seung;Kim, Mi-Sook;Lee, Sung-Duk;Kim, Sung-Soo;Lee, Keon-Myung;Lee, Chan-Hee
    • Journal of Microbiology
    • /
    • v.44 no.6
    • /
    • pp.655-659
    • /
    • 2006
  • Phylogenetic studies of nef, pol, and env gene sequences of HIV-1 isolated from Koreans suggested the presence of a Korean clade in which Korean sequences are clustered to the exclusion of foreign sequences. We attempted to identify and characterize the Korean clade using all vif gene sequences isolated from Koreans registered in the NCBI GenBank database (n = 233). Most (77 %) of the Korean isolates belonged to the Korean clade as a large subcluster in subtype B, designated the Korean clade subtype B ($K_{C}B$). $K_{C}B$ sequences were relatively homogenous compared to Korean subtype B sequences that did not belong to the $K_{C}B$ (non-Korean clade subtype B; $NK_{C}B$). Comparison of amino acid frequencies of $K_{C}B$ and $NK_{C}B$ sequences revealed several positions where the amino acid frequencies were significantly different. These amino acid residues were critical in separating $K_{C}B$ from $NK_{C}B$ or from foreign sequences, since substitution of these amino acids in $K_{C}B$ with the $NK_{C}B$ amino acids relocated the $K_{C}B$ sequences to $NK_{C}B$, and vice versa. Further analyses of $K_{C}B$ will help us to understand the origin and evolutionary history of $K_{C}B$.

Genetic Variation of Taenia Pisiformis Collected from Sichuan, China, Based on the Mitochondrial Cytochrome b gene

  • Yang, Deying;Ren, Yongjun;Fu, Yan;Xie, Yue;Nie, Huaming;Nong, Xiang;Gu, Xiaobin;Wang, Shuxian;Peng, Xuerong;Yang, Guangyou
    • Parasites, Hosts and Diseases
    • /
    • v.51 no.4
    • /
    • pp.449-452
    • /
    • 2013
  • Taenia pisiformis is one of the most important parasites of canines and rabbits. T. pisiformis cysticercus (the larval stage) causes severe damage to rabbit breeding, which results in huge economic losses. In this study, the genetic variation of T. pisiformis was determined in Sichuan Province, China. Fragments of the mitochondrial cytochrome b (cytb) (922 bp) gene were amplified in 53 isolates from 8 regions of T. pisiformis. Overall, 12 haplotypes were found in these 53 cytb sequences. Molecular genetic variations showed 98.4% genetic variation derived from intra-region. $F_{ST}$ and Nm values suggested that 53 isolates were not genetically differentiated and had low levels of genetic diversity. Neutrality indices of the cytb sequences showed the evolution of T. pisiformis followed a neutral mode. Phylogenetic analysis revealed no correlation between phylogeny and geographic distribution. These findings indicate that 53 isolates of T. pisiformis keep a low genetic variation, which provide useful knowledge for monitoring changes in parasite populations for future control strategies.

Genetic Relationship between Korean Verticillium dahliae Isolates and the Other Verticillium Species (국내에서 분리된 Verticillium dahliae의 유전적 유연관계 분석)

  • Shang, Fei;Choi, You-Ri;Song, Jeong-Young;Kim, Hong-Gi
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
    • /
    • v.39 no.1
    • /
    • pp.11-15
    • /
    • 2011
  • To provide basic information for Verticillium spp., molecular methods were applied to analyze genetic characteristics within Verticillium spp. including Verticillium dahliae, isolated from diseased plants in two regions of Korea. Five Korean isolates of V. dahliae causing Verticillium wilt on chrysanthemum were analyzed, together with six other Verticillium spp., using mitochondrial small subunit rRNA gene (rns) sequence and random-amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD). In a phylogenetic tree based on rns region sequences, Korean V. dahliae isolates formed a single clade with foreign isolates, whereas the other Verticillium spp. formed separate groups. In addition to rns sequence analysis, a dendrogram based on RAPD fragment patterns also showed clustering of all V. dahliae isolates into one group, separate from the six different Verticillium spp., and the V. dahliae isolates formed three subgroups which corresponded to the regions of origin, Kumi, Busan city and Canada. This indicates that high genetic variation exists between regions, although the fungus was isolated from the same host plant, chrysanthemum. These results provide the foundation for the study of genetic diversity and relationships among V. dahliae isolates in Korea.