The order Chytridiales is the largest and most diverse of five orders in phylum Chytridiomycota. Rhizophydium is one of two genera in the Chytridiales with more than 220 described species. Because thallus characters used in classical descriptions of Rhizophydium species often intergrade into other species, as well as other genera, species distinctions frequently are unclear. Species often are delimited solely on substrate or host; many described species consequently may be synonymous. On the other hand, because the thallus is relatively simple morphologically similar forms actually may be genetically distinct. As a beginning for the revision of the genus Rhizophydium, this study used molecular and ultra-structural analyses to characterize cultures identified as Rhizophydium species. A broad geographic sampling of Rhizophydium-like organisms from North American and Australian soils was studied as a foundation for enhanced identification of soil chytrids. The first objective was to ascertain the genetic variability of Rhizophydium isolates with spherical to angular sporangia and multiple discharge pores, using nuclear large subunit rRNA gene sequence analysis. Sequences of 45 isolates of Chytridiales, including 29 isolates in the Rhizophydium clade were analyzed. Alignment based on LSU rRNA secondary structure revealed a similar reduced stem and loop structure in the C1_3 helix region that distinguished morphologically similar Rhizophydium clade members from other members of the Chytridiales. In our parsimony analysis, the Chytriomyces clade was sister of the Nowakowskiella, Lacustromyces and Rhizophydium clades. Six subclades within the Rhizophydium clade were resolved. Several closely related isolates appeared geographically widespread because North American and Australian isolates were found together in three of the six subclades. The second objective was to sample zoospore ultrastructure among isolates in the six subclades and an unresolved polytomy group within the Rhizophydium clade, thus evaluating the application of zoospore ultrastructure for lower level taxonomic decisions. All isolates were examined by transmission electron microscopy, and four types of zoospores were found. Thus, within the well-supported Rhizophydium clade, zoospore ultrastructure appeared divergent. Because similar zoospore types also were found in two distinct subclades, zoospore structure might be interpreted superficially as convergent. However, unresolved polytomys indicated molecular divergence among these taxa and the need for a more diverse taxa and gene sampling to resolve relationships. One of the zoospore types characterized represents the most simplified form of zoospore described so far in the Chytridiales. The range in molecular secondary structure composition and in zoospore morphology suggested that isolates we provisionally placed in Rhizophydium actually represent multiple genera.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rhizophydium clade
20
rhizophydium
13
zoospore ultrastructure
12
isolates
9
rhizophydium isolates
8
described species
8
rhizophydium species
8
north american
8
american australian
8
secondary structure
8

Similar Publications

New species of aquatic chytrids from Oman.

Mycologia

May 2021

Department of Crop Sciences, College of Agricultural and Marine Sciences, Sultan Qaboos University, P.O. Box-34, Al-Khod 123, Oman.

Oman is a desert country in the south of the Middle East. Springs and other water sources that harbor aquatic organisms can be separated by hundreds of kilometers. In Oct 2019, we isolated four freshwater aquatic fungi (Chytridiomycota) from benthic detritus baited with pine pollen on a general nutrient medium near Salalah, Oman.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phylogenetic Position of Parasitic Chytrids on Diatoms: Characterization of a Novel Clade in Chytridiomycota.

J Eukaryot Microbiol

May 2017

Sugadaira Montane Research Center, University of Tsukuba, 1278-294, Sugadaira-Kogen, Ueda, Nagano, 386-2204, Japan.

Chytrids are true fungi that reproduce with posteriorly uniflagellate zoospores. In the last decade, environmental DNA surveys revealed a large number of uncultured chytrids as well as undescribed order-level novel clades in Chytridiomycota. Although many species have been morphologically described, only some DNA sequence data of parasitic chytrids are available from the database.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A new family and four new genera in Rhizophydiales (Chytridiomycota).

Mycologia

September 2015

Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487.

Many chytrid phylogenies contain lineages representing a lone taxon or a few organisms. One such lineage in recent molecular phylogenies of Rhizophydiales contained two marine chytrids, Rhizophydium littoreum and Rhizophydium aestuarii. To better understand the relationship between these organisms, we increased sampling such that the R.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the order Chytridiales, Rhizophydium is a morphologically defined genus based upon the production of a monocentric, inoperculate, epibiotic sporangium, an endobiotic rhizoidal axis which branches, and an epibiotic resting spore. Despite its simple morphology, over 220 species of Rhizophydium have been described. Recent phylogenetic analyses using nuLSU rRNA (28 S rRNA) gene sequences of a geographically diverse sampling of Rhizophydium cultures revealed that the classical genus Rhizophydium is genetically more variable than previously understood and actually represents multiple genera.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The order Chytridiales is the largest and most diverse of five orders in phylum Chytridiomycota. Rhizophydium is one of two genera in the Chytridiales with more than 220 described species. Because thallus characters used in classical descriptions of Rhizophydium species often intergrade into other species, as well as other genera, species distinctions frequently are unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!