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A genome-scale phylogeny of the kingdom Fungi

Authors :
Jason E. Stajich
Ying Chang
Timothy Y. James
Xing-Xing Shen
Antonis Rokas
Jacob L. Steenwyk
Casey W. Dunn
Yuanning Li
Marizeth Groenewald
Chris Todd Hittinger
Yan Wang
Joseph W. Spatafora
Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute
Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute - Collection
Source :
Current Biology, 31(8), 1653-1665.e5. Cell Press, Current biology : CB, vol 31, iss 8, Curr Biol
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

SUMMARY: Phylogenomic studies using genome-scale amounts of data have greatly improved understanding of the tree of life. Despite the diversity, ecological significance, and biomedical and industrial importance of fungi, evolutionary relationships among several major lineages remain poorly resolved, especially those near the base of the fungal phylogeny. To examine poorly resolved relationships and assess progress toward a genome-scale phylogeny of the fungal kingdom, we compiled a phylogenomic data matrix of 290 genes from the genomes of 1,644 species that includes representatives from most major fungal lineages. We also compiled 11 data matrices by subsampling genes or taxa from the full data matrix based on filtering criteria previously shown to improve phylogenomic inference. Analyses of these 12 data matrices using concatenation- and coalescent-based approaches yielded a robust phylogeny of the fungal kingdom in which ~85% of internal branches were congruent across data matrices and approaches used. We found support for several historically poorly resolved relationships as well as evidence for polytomies likely stemming from episodes of ancient diversification. By examining the relative evolutionary divergence of taxonomic groups of equivalent rank, we found that fungal taxonomy is broadly aligned with both genome sequence divergence and divergence time, but also identified lineages where current taxonomic circumscription does not reflect their levels of evolutionary divergence. Our results provide a robust phylogenomic framework to explore the tempo and mode of fungal evolution and offer directions for future fungal phylogenetic and taxonomic studies. IN BRIEF: Li et al. analyze 290 genes from 1,644 species to infer a genome-scale phylogeny of the fungal kingdom. Analyses using different approaches and data matrices show that 85% of inferred relationships among fungi are robustly supported. The results provide a robust phylogenomic framework to explore the tempo and mode of fungal evolution.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09609822
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Biology, 31(8), 1653-1665.e5. Cell Press, Current biology : CB, vol 31, iss 8, Curr Biol
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....72a10f07b70f69eeb032c89966eb59ef