Mollisiaceae: An overlooked lineage of diverse endophytes

Mollisia is a taxonomically neglected discomycete genus (Helotiales, Leotiomycetes) of commonly encountered saprotrophs on decaying plant tissues throughout temperate regions. The combination of indistinct morphological characters, more than 700 names in the literature, and lack of reference DNA seq...

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Main Authors: J.B. Tanney, K.A. Seifert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-03-01
Series:Studies in Mycology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166061620300087
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spelling doaj-035b2d0ae7a549149312aae5442958aa2020-11-25T03:48:28ZengElsevierStudies in Mycology0166-06162020-03-0195293380Mollisiaceae: An overlooked lineage of diverse endophytesJ.B. Tanney0K.A. Seifert1Pacific Forestry Centre, Canadian Forest Service, Natural Resources Canada, 506 Burnside Road, Victoria, British Columbia, V8Z 1M5, Canada; Correspondence: J.B. TanneyOttawa Research and Development Centre, Biodiversity (Mycology and Microbiology), Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, 960 Carling Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0C6, Canada; Department of Biology, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, Ontario, K1S 5B6, CanadaMollisia is a taxonomically neglected discomycete genus (Helotiales, Leotiomycetes) of commonly encountered saprotrophs on decaying plant tissues throughout temperate regions. The combination of indistinct morphological characters, more than 700 names in the literature, and lack of reference DNA sequences presents a major challenge when working with Mollisia. Unidentified endophytes, including strains that produced antifungal or antiinsectan secondary metabolites, were isolated from conifer needles in New Brunswick and placed with uncertainty in Phialocephala and Mollisia, necessitating a more comprehensive treatment of these genera. In this study, morphology and multigene phylogenetic analyses were used to explore the taxonomy of Mollisiaceae, including Mollisia, Phialocephala, and related genera, using new field collections, herbarium specimens, and accessioned cultures and sequences. The phylogeny of Mollisiaceae was reconstructed and compared using the nuc internal transcribed spacer rDNA (ITS) barcode and partial sequences of the 28S nuc rDNA (LSU) gene, largest subunit of RNA polymerase II (RPB1), DNA topoisomerase I (TOP1), and the hypothetical protein Lipin/Ned1/Smp2 (LNS2). The results show that endophytism is common throughout the Mollisiaceae lineage in a diverse range of hosts but is infrequently attributed to Mollisia because of a paucity of reference sequences. Generic boundaries within Mollisiaceae are poorly resolved and based on phylogenetic evidence the family included species placed in Acephala, Acidomelania, Barrenia, Bispora, Cheirospora, Cystodendron, Fuscosclera, Hysteronaevia, Loramyces, Mollisia, Neopyrenopeziza, Obtectodiscus, Ombrophila, Patellariopsis, Phialocephala, Pulvinata, Tapesia (=Mollisia), and Trimmatostroma. Taxonomic novelties included the description of five novel Mollisia species and five novel Phialocephala species and the synonymy of Fuscosclera with Phialocephala, Acidomelania with Mollisia, and Loramycetaceae with Mollisiaceae.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166061620300087Mollisiaceae, Phialocephala heterosperma (Münzenb. & Bubner) J.B. Tanney & K.A. SeifertPhialocephala lignicola (Hern.-Restr., J. Mena & Gené) J.B. Tanney & K.A. SeifertMollisia panicicola (E. Walsh & N. Zhang) J.B. Tanney & K.A. Seifert. New species:Mollisia diesbachiana Tanney & SeifertM. monilioides Tanney & SeifertM. novobrunsvicensis Tanney & Seifert
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J.B. Tanney
K.A. Seifert
spellingShingle J.B. Tanney
K.A. Seifert
Mollisiaceae: An overlooked lineage of diverse endophytes
Studies in Mycology
Mollisiaceae, Phialocephala heterosperma (Münzenb. & Bubner) J.B. Tanney & K.A. Seifert
Phialocephala lignicola (Hern.-Restr., J. Mena & Gené) J.B. Tanney & K.A. Seifert
Mollisia panicicola (E. Walsh & N. Zhang) J.B. Tanney & K.A. Seifert. New species:
Mollisia diesbachiana Tanney & Seifert
M. monilioides Tanney & Seifert
M. novobrunsvicensis Tanney & Seifert
author_facet J.B. Tanney
K.A. Seifert
author_sort J.B. Tanney
title Mollisiaceae: An overlooked lineage of diverse endophytes
title_short Mollisiaceae: An overlooked lineage of diverse endophytes
title_full Mollisiaceae: An overlooked lineage of diverse endophytes
title_fullStr Mollisiaceae: An overlooked lineage of diverse endophytes
title_full_unstemmed Mollisiaceae: An overlooked lineage of diverse endophytes
title_sort mollisiaceae: an overlooked lineage of diverse endophytes
publisher Elsevier
series Studies in Mycology
issn 0166-0616
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Mollisia is a taxonomically neglected discomycete genus (Helotiales, Leotiomycetes) of commonly encountered saprotrophs on decaying plant tissues throughout temperate regions. The combination of indistinct morphological characters, more than 700 names in the literature, and lack of reference DNA sequences presents a major challenge when working with Mollisia. Unidentified endophytes, including strains that produced antifungal or antiinsectan secondary metabolites, were isolated from conifer needles in New Brunswick and placed with uncertainty in Phialocephala and Mollisia, necessitating a more comprehensive treatment of these genera. In this study, morphology and multigene phylogenetic analyses were used to explore the taxonomy of Mollisiaceae, including Mollisia, Phialocephala, and related genera, using new field collections, herbarium specimens, and accessioned cultures and sequences. The phylogeny of Mollisiaceae was reconstructed and compared using the nuc internal transcribed spacer rDNA (ITS) barcode and partial sequences of the 28S nuc rDNA (LSU) gene, largest subunit of RNA polymerase II (RPB1), DNA topoisomerase I (TOP1), and the hypothetical protein Lipin/Ned1/Smp2 (LNS2). The results show that endophytism is common throughout the Mollisiaceae lineage in a diverse range of hosts but is infrequently attributed to Mollisia because of a paucity of reference sequences. Generic boundaries within Mollisiaceae are poorly resolved and based on phylogenetic evidence the family included species placed in Acephala, Acidomelania, Barrenia, Bispora, Cheirospora, Cystodendron, Fuscosclera, Hysteronaevia, Loramyces, Mollisia, Neopyrenopeziza, Obtectodiscus, Ombrophila, Patellariopsis, Phialocephala, Pulvinata, Tapesia (=Mollisia), and Trimmatostroma. Taxonomic novelties included the description of five novel Mollisia species and five novel Phialocephala species and the synonymy of Fuscosclera with Phialocephala, Acidomelania with Mollisia, and Loramycetaceae with Mollisiaceae.
topic Mollisiaceae, Phialocephala heterosperma (Münzenb. & Bubner) J.B. Tanney & K.A. Seifert
Phialocephala lignicola (Hern.-Restr., J. Mena & Gené) J.B. Tanney & K.A. Seifert
Mollisia panicicola (E. Walsh & N. Zhang) J.B. Tanney & K.A. Seifert. New species:
Mollisia diesbachiana Tanney & Seifert
M. monilioides Tanney & Seifert
M. novobrunsvicensis Tanney & Seifert
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166061620300087
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