capítulo de libro
Fusarium: more than a node or a foot-shaped basal cell
Fecha
2021Autor
Willem Crous, Pedro
Lombard, Lorenzo
Sandoval Denis, Marcelo
Seifert, Keith A.
Schroers, Hans Josef
Chaverri Echandi, Priscila
Gené Díaz, Josepa
Guarro Artigas, Josep
Hirooka, Yuuri
Bensch, Konstanze
Kema, Gert
Lamprecht, Sandra C.
Cai, Lei
Rossman, Amy Y.
Stadler, Marc
Summerbell, Richard C.
Taylor, John W.
Ploch, Sebastian
Visagie, Cobus Meyer
Yilmaz, Neriman
Frisvad, Jens Christian
Abdel-Azeem, Ahmed M.
Abdollahzadeh, Jafar
Abdolrasouli, Ali Reza
Akulov, Alexander
Alberts, Johanna Francina
Araújo, João P. M.
Ariyawansa, Hiran Anjana
Bakhshi, Mounes
Bendiksby, Mika
Ben Hadj Amor, A.
Bezerra, Jadson D. P.
Boekhout, Teun
Câmara, Marcos Paz Saraiva
Carbia, Mauricio
Cardinali, Gianluigi
Castañeda Ruiz, Rafael Felipe
Celis Ramirez, Adriana Marcela
Chaturvedi, Vishnu
Collemare, Jérôme
Croll, Daniel
Damm, Ulrike
Decock, Cony A.
de Vries, Ronald P.
Ezekiel, Chibundu N.
Fan, Xinlei
Fernández, Nicolás
Gaya, Ester
González, Cristian
Gramaje Pérez, David
Groenewald, Johannes Zacharias
Grube, Martin
Guevara Suarez, Marcela
Gupta, Vijai Kumar
Guarnaccia, Vladimiro
Haddaji, A.
Hagen, Ferry
Haelewaters, Danny
Hansen, Karen
Hashimoto, Akira
Hernández Restrepo, Margarita
Houbraken, Jos
Hubka, V.
Hyde, Kevin David
Iturriaga, Teresa
Jeewon, Rajesh
Johnston, Peter R.
Jurjević, Željko
Karalti, Iskender
Korsten, Lise
Kuramae, Eiko
Kušan, Ivana
Labuda, Roman
Lawrence, Daniel P.
Lee, H. B.
Lechat, Christian
Li, H. Y.
Litovka, Yulia A.
Maharachchikumbura, Sajeewa
Marin Felix, Yasmina
Matio Kemkuignou, Blondelle
Matocec, N.
McTaggart, Alistair
Mlčoch, Patrik
Mugnai, Laura
Nakashima, Chiharu
Nilsson, R. Henrik
Noumeur, Sara Raouia
Pavlov, Igor N.
Peralta, M. P.
Phillips, Alan J. L.
Pitt, John L.
Polizzi, Giancarlo
Quaedvlieg, William
Rajeshkumar, K. C.
Restrepo Restrepo, Silvia
Rhaiem, Azza
Robert, J.
Robert, Vincent
Rodrigues, Anderson M.
Salgado Salazar, Catalina
Samson, Robert A.
Santos, A. C. S.
Shivas, Roger
de Souza Motta, Cristina Maria
Sun, Guang-Yu
Swart, Wijnand
Szoke, S.
Tan, Yu Pei
Taylor, Joanne
Taylor, Paul W. J.
Vieira Tiago, Patrícia
Váczy, Kálmán Zoltán
van de Wiele, N.
van der Merwe, Nicolaas A.
Verkley, Gerard J. M.
Vieira, W. A. S.
Vizzini, Alfredo
Weir, Bevan
Wijayawardene, Nalin N.
Xia, Ji-Wen
Yañez Morales, Maria de Jesus
Yurkov, Andrey
Zamora Senoret, Juan Carlos
Zare, Rasoul
Zhang, Chunli
Thines, Marco
Institución
Resumen
Recent publications have argued that there are potentially serious consequences for researchers in recognising distinct genera in the terminal fusarioid clade of the family Nectriaceae. Thus, an alternate hypothesis, namely a very broad concept of the genus Fusarium was proposed. In doing so, however, a significant body of data that supports distinct genera in Nectriaceae based on morphology, biology, and phylogeny is disregarded. A DNA phylogeny based on 19 orthologous protein-coding genes was presented to support a very broad concept of Fusarium at the F1 node in Nectriaceae. Here, we demonstrate that re-analyses of this dataset show that all 19 genes support the F3 node that represents Fusarium sensu stricto as defined by F. sambucinum (sexual morph synonym Gibberella pulicaris). The backbone of the phylogeny is resolved by the concatenated alignment, but only six of the 19 genes fully support the F1 node, representing the broad circumscription of Fusarium. Furthermore, a re-analysis of the concatenated dataset revealed alternate topologies in different phylogenetic algorithms, highlighting the deep divergence and unresolved placement of various Nectriaceae lineages proposed as members of Fusarium. Species of Fusarium s. str. are characterised by Gibberella sexual morphs, asexual morphs with thin- or thick-walled macroconidia that have variously shaped apical and basal cells, and trichothecene mycotoxin production, which separates them from other fusarioid genera. Here we show that the Wollenweber concept of Fusarium presently accounts for 20 segregate genera with clear-cut synapomorphic traits, and that fusarioid macroconidia represent a character that has been gained or lost multiple times throughout Nectriaceae. Thus, the very broad circumscription of Fusarium is blurry and without apparent synapomorphies, and does not include all genera with fusarium-like macroconidia, which are spread throughout Nectriaceae (e.g., Cosmosporella, Macroconia, Microcera). In this study four new genera are introduced, along with 18 new species and 16 new combinations. These names convey information about relationships, morphology, and ecological preference that would otherwise be lost in a broader definition of Fusarium. To assist users to correctly identify fusarioid genera and species, we introduce a new online identification database, Fusarioid-ID, accessible at www.fusarium.org. The database comprises partial sequences from multiple genes commonly used to identify fusarioid taxa (act1, CaM, his3, rpb1, rpb2, tef1, tub2, ITS, and LSU). In this paper, we also present a nomenclator of names that have been introduced in Fusarium up to January 2021 as well as their current status, types, and diagnostic DNA barcode data. In this study, researchers from 46 countries, representing taxonomists, plant pathologists, medical mycologists, quarantine officials, regulatory agencies, and students, strongly support the application and use of a more precisely delimited Fusarium (= Gibberella) concept to accommodate taxa from the robust monophyletic node F3 on the basis of a well-defined and unique combination of morphological and biochemical features. This F3 node includes, among others, species of the F. fujikuroi, F. incarnatum-equiseti, F. oxysporum, and F. sambucinum species complexes, but not species of Bisifusarium [F. dimerum species complex (SC)], Cyanonectria (F. buxicola SC), Geejayessia (F. staphyleae SC), Neocosmospora (F. solani SC) or Rectifusarium (F. ventricosum SC). The present study represents the first step to generating a new online monograph of Fusarium and allied fusarioid genera