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Assembling the fungal tree of life: progress, classification, and evolution of subcellular traits
Authors:Lutzoni François  Kauff Frank  Cox Cymon J  McLaughlin David  Celio Gail  Dentinger Bryn  Padamsee Mahajabeen  Hibbett David  James Timothy Y  Baloch Elisabeth  Grube Martin  Reeb Valérie  Hofstetter Valérie  Schoch Conrad  Arnold A Elizabeth  Miadlikowska Jolanta  Spatafora Joseph  Johnson Desiree  Hambleton Sarah  Crockett Michael  Shoemaker Robert  Sung Gi-Ho  Lücking Robert  Lumbsch Thorsten  O'Donnell Kerry  Binder Manfred  Diederich Paul  Ertz Damien  Gueidan Cécile  Hansen Karen  Harris Richard C  Hosaka Kentaro  Lim Young-Woon  Matheny Brandon  Nishida Hiromi  Pfister Don  Rogers Jack  Rossman Amy  Schmitt Imke
Institution:Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708-0338 USA;
Abstract:Based on an overview of progress in molecular systematics of the true fungi (Fungi/Eumycota) since 1990, little overlap was found among single-locus data matrices, which explains why no large-scale multilocus phylogenetic analysis had been undertaken to reveal deep relationships among fungi. As part of the project "Assembling the Fungal Tree of Life" (AFTOL), results of four Bayesian analyses are reported with complementary bootstrap assessment of phylogenetic confidence based on (1) a combined two-locus data set (nucSSU and nucLSU rDNA) with 558 species representing all traditionally recognized fungal phyla (Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, Chytridiomycota, Zygomycota) and the Glomeromycota, (2) a combined three-locus data set (nucSSU, nucLSU, and mitSSU rDNA) with 236 species, (3) a combined three-locus data set (nucSSU, nucLSU rDNA, and RPB2) with 157 species, and (4) a combined four-locus data set (nucSSU, nucLSU, mitSSU rDNA, and RPB2) with 103 species. Because of the lack of complementarity among single-locus data sets, the last three analyses included only members of the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota. The four-locus analysis resolved multiple deep relationships within the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota that were not revealed previously or that received only weak support in previous studies. The impact of this newly discovered phylogenetic structure on supraordinal classifications is discussed. Based on these results and reanalysis of subcellular data, current knowledge of the evolution of septal features of fungal hyphae is synthesized, and a preliminary reassessment of ascomal evolution is presented. Based on previously unpublished data and sequences from GenBank, this study provides a phylogenetic synthesis for the Fungi and a framework for future phylogenetic studies on fungi.
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