1. Cladosterigma : an enigmatic fungus, previously considered a basidiomycete, now revealed as an ascomycete member of the Gomphillaceae.
- Author
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Guterres DC, Dos Santos MDDM, Silva RAFD, Souza ESDC, Soares WRO, Pinho DB, and Dianese JC
- Subjects
- Ascomycota cytology, Ascomycota genetics, Brazil, DNA, Fungal genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, DNA, Ribosomal genetics, Eugenia microbiology, Peptide Elongation Factor 1 genetics, Phylogeny, Plant Leaves microbiology, RNA Polymerase II genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Species Specificity, Ascomycota classification, Ascomycota physiology
- Abstract
Cladosterigma clavariellum has been treated as a basidiomycete since its first description by Spegazzini in 1886 as Microcera clavariella . After further morphological studies, between 1919 and 2011, it remained among the basidiomycetes, most recently as incertae sedis in the order Cryptobasidiales. Our studies, based on light and scanning electron microscopy, supported by multilocus phylogenetic analyses-second-largest subunit of RNA polymerase II ( RPB2 ), translation elongation factor 1-alpha ( TEF1 ), small subunit (18S), large subunit (28S), and nuclear internal transcribed spacers (ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 = ITS) of the nuclear rDNA sequences, and mitochondrial rDNA small subunit (mtSSU)-finally determined the phylogenetic placement of Cladosterigma as the first nonlichenicolous mycoparasitic member of the Gomphillaceae within the Graphidales, an ascomycete order previously composed predominantly of lichen-forming fungi.
- Published
- 2020
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