RANGEWIDE ANALYSIS OF FUNGAL ASSOCIATIONS IN THE FULLY MYCOHETEROTROPHIC CORALLORHIZA STRIATA COMPLEX (ORCHIDACEAE) REVEALS EXTREME SPECIFICITY ON ECTOMYCORRHIZAL TOMENTELLA (THELEPHORACEAE) ACROSS NORTH AMERICA

被引:47
作者
Barrett, Craig F. [1 ]
Freudenstein, John V. [1 ]
Taylor, D. Lee [2 ]
Koljalg, Urmas [3 ]
机构
[1] Ohio State Univ, Herbarium, Dept Evolut Ecol & Organismal Biol, Columbus, OH 43212 USA
[2] Univ Alaska Fairbanks, Inst Arctic Biol, Fairbanks, AK 99775 USA
[3] Univ Tartu, Inst Ecol & Earth Sci, EE-51005 Tartu, Estonia
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
cophylogeny; Corallorhiza striata; geographic mosaic; mycoheterotrophy; mycorrhiza; Orchidaceae; parasite; phylogenetics; plastid DNA; Thelephoraceae; Tomentella; MULTIPLE SEQUENCE ALIGNMENT; MYCORRHIZAL SPECIFICITY; MONOTROPOIDEAE ERICACEAE; DIVERSITY; DNA; GERMINATION; TRIFIDA; MODEL; SPECIALIZATION; IDENTIFICATION;
D O I
10.3732/ajb.0900230
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Fully mycoheterotrophic plants offer a fascinating system for studying phylogenetic associations and dynamics of symbiotic specificity between hosts and parasites. These plants frequently parasitize mutualistic mycorrhizal symbioses between fungi and trees. Corallorhiza striata is a fully mycoheterotrophic, North American orchid distributed from Mexico to Canada, but the full extent of its fungal associations and specificity is unknown. Plastid DNA (orchids) and ITS (fungi) were sequenced for 107 individuals from 42 populations across North America to identify C. striata mycobionts and test hypotheses on fungal host specificity. Four largely allopatric orchid plastid clades were recovered, and all fungal sequences were most similar to ectomycorrhizal Tomentella (Thelephoraceae), nearly all to T. fuscocinerea. Orchid-fungal gene trees were incongruent but nonindependent; orchid clades associated with divergent sets of fungi, with a clade of Californian orchids subspecialized toward a narrow Tomentella fuscocinerea clade. Both geography and orchid clades were important determinants of fungal association, following a geographic mosaic model of specificity on Tomentella fungi. These findings corroborate patterns described in other fully mycoheterotrophic orchids and monotropes, represent one of the most extensive plant-fungal genetic investigations of fully mycoheterotrophic plants, and have conservation implications for the >400 plant species engaging in this trophic strategy worldwide.
引用
收藏
页码:628 / 643
页数:16
相关论文
共 102 条
[51]  
2
[52]   Symbiotic germination and development of myco-heterotrophic plants in nature:: ontogeny of Corallorhiza trifida and characterization of its mycorrhizal fungi [J].
McKendrick, SL ;
Leake, JR ;
Taylor, DL ;
Read, DJ .
NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2000, 145 (03) :523-537
[53]   CopyCat:: cophylogenetic analysis tool [J].
Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P. ;
Auch, Alexander F. ;
Huson, Daniel H. ;
Goeker, Markus .
BIOINFORMATICS, 2007, 23 (07) :898-900
[54]   Incorporating information from length-mutational events into phylogenetic analysis [J].
Müller, K .
MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION, 2006, 38 (03) :667-676
[55]  
Muller Kai, 2005, Appl Bioinformatics, V4, P65
[56]   MATHEMATICAL-MODEL FOR STUDYING GENETIC-VARIATION IN TERMS OF RESTRICTION ENDONUCLEASES [J].
NEI, M ;
LI, WH .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1979, 76 (10) :5269-5273
[57]   Approaching the taxonomic affiliation of unidentified sequences in public databases - an example from the mycorrhizal fungi [J].
Nilsson, RH ;
Kristiansson, E ;
Ryberg, M ;
Larsson, KH .
BMC BIOINFORMATICS, 2005, 6 (1)
[58]   The Parsimony Ratchet, a new method for rapid parsimony analysis [J].
Nixon, KC .
CLADISTICS-THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE WILLI HENNIG SOCIETY, 1999, 15 (04) :407-414
[59]   Widespread mycorrhizal specificity correlates to mycorrhizal function in the neotropical, epiphytic orchid Ionopsis utricularioides (Orchidaceae) [J].
Otero, J. Tupac ;
Flanagan, Nicola S. ;
Herre, E. Allen ;
Ackerman, James D. ;
Bayman, Paul .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2007, 94 (12) :1944-1950
[60]   Orchid diversity - beyond deception [J].
Otero, JT ;
Flanagan, NS .
TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2006, 21 (02) :64-65