Conserved Meiotic Machinery in Glomus spp., a Putatively Ancient Asexual Fungal Lineage
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Abstract
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) represent an ecologically important and evolutionarily intriguing group of symbionts of
land plants, currently thought to have propagated clonally for over 500 Myr. AMF produce multinucleate spores and may
exchange nuclei through anastomosis, but meiosis has never been observed in this group. A provocative alternative for their
successful and long asexual evolutionary history is that these organisms may have cryptic sex, allowing them to recombine
alleles and compensate for deleterious mutations. This is partly supported by reports of recombination among some of their
natural populations. We explored this hypothesis by searching for some of the primary tools for a sustainable sexual
cycle—the genes whose products are required for proper completion of meiotic recombination in yeast—in the genomes of
four AMF and compared them with homologs of representative ascomycete, basidiomycete, chytridiomycete, and
zygomycete fungi. Our investigation used molecular and bioinformatic tools to identify homologs of 51 meiotic genes,
including seven meiosis-specific genes and other ‘‘core meiotic genes’’ conserved in the genomes of the AMF Glomus
diaphanum (MUCL 43196), Glomus irregulare (DAOM-197198), Glomus clarum (DAOM 234281), and Glomus cerebriforme
(DAOM 227022). Homology of AMF meiosis-specific genes was verified by phylogenetic analyses with representative fungi,
animals (Mus, Hydra), and a choanoflagellate (Monosiga). Together, these results indicate that these supposedly ancient
asexual fungi may be capable of undergoing a conventional meiosis; a hypothesis that is consistent with previous reports of
recombination within and across some of their populations.
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Keywords
comparative genomics, meiosis, fungi, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, genome evolution, ancient asexuals
