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Fusarium sibiricum sp. nov, a novel type A trichothecene-producing Fusarium from northern Asia closely related to F. sporotrichioides and F. langsethiae

Authors :
O. P. Gavrilova
Galina P. Kononenko
Alexey A. Burkin
Susan P. McCormick
Takayuki Aoki
Kerry O'Donnell
Robert H. Proctor
Todd J. Ward
Tapani Yli-Mattila
Tatiana Gagkaeva
Source :
International Journal of Food Microbiology. 147:58-68
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2011.

Abstract

Production of type A trichothecenes has been reported in the closely related species Fusarium langsethiae and F. sporotrichioides. Here, we characterized a collection of Fusarium isolates from Siberia and the Russian Far East (hereafter Asian isolates) that produce high levels of the type A trichothecene T-2 toxin and are similar in morphology to the type A trichothecene-producing F. langsethiae, and to F. poae which often produces the type B trichothecene nivalenol. The Asian isolates possess unique macroscopic and microscopic characters and have a unique TG repeat in the nuclear ribosomal intergenic spacer (IGS rDNA) region. In Asian isolates, the TRI1–TRI16 locus, which determines type A versus type B trichothecene production in other species, is more similar in organization and sequence to the TRI1–TRI16 locus in F. sporotrichioides and F. langsethiae than to that in F. poae. Phylogenetic analysis of the TRI1 and TRI16 gene coding regions indicates that the genes in the Asian isolates are more closely related to those of F. sporotrichioides than F. langsethiae. Phylogenetic analysis of the beta-tubulin, translation elongation factor, RNA polymerase II and phosphate permease gene sequences resolved the Asian isolates into a well-supported sister lineage to F. sporotrichioides, with F. langsethiae forming a sister lineage to F. sporotrichioides and the Asian isolates. The Asian isolates are conspecific with Norwegian isolate IBT 9959 based on morphological and molecular analyses. In addition, the European F. langsethiae isolates from Finland and Russia were resolved into two distinct subgroups based on analyses of translation elongation factor and IGS rDNA sequences. Nucleotide polymorphisms within the IGS rDNA were used to design PCR primers that successfully differentiated the Asian isolates from F. sporotrichioides and F. langsethiae. Based on these data, we formally propose that the Asian isolates together with Norwegian isolate IBT 9959 comprise a novel phylogenetic species, F. sibiricum, while the two subgroups of F. langsethiae only represent intraspecific groups.

Details

ISSN :
01681605
Volume :
147
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Food Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae878d2bfeaceab66679cbe58a6465ec
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2011.03.007