Aspergillus flavus resident in Kenya: high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation-driven evolution

Aspergillus flavus has long been considered to be an asexual species. Although a sexual stage was recently reported for this species from in vitro studies, the amount of recombination ongoing in natural populations and the genetic distance across which meiosis occurs is largely unknown. In the curre...

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Autores principales: Islam, M.S., Callicott, K.A., Mutegi, C., Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit, Cotty, P.J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97855
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author Islam, M.S.
Callicott, K.A.
Mutegi, C.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Cotty, P.J.
author_browse Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Callicott, K.A.
Cotty, P.J.
Islam, M.S.
Mutegi, C.
author_facet Islam, M.S.
Callicott, K.A.
Mutegi, C.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Cotty, P.J.
author_sort Islam, M.S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Aspergillus flavus has long been considered to be an asexual species. Although a sexual stage was recently reported for this species from in vitro studies, the amount of recombination ongoing in natural populations and the genetic distance across which meiosis occurs is largely unknown. In the current study, genetic diversity, reproduction and evolution of natural A. flavus populations endemic to Kenya were examined. A total of 2744 isolates recovered from 629 maize-field soils across southern Kenya in two consecutive seasons were characterized at 17 SSR loci, revealing high genetic diversity (9-72 alleles/locus and 2140 haplotypes). Clonal reproduction and persistence of clonal lineages predominated, with many identical haplotypes occurring in multiple soil samples and both seasons. Genetic analyses predicted three distinct lineages with linkage disequilibrium and evolutionary relationships among haplotypes within each lineage suggesting mutation-driven evolution followed by clonal reproduction. Low genetic differentiation among adjacent communities reflected frequent short distance dispersal.
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spelling CGSpace978552025-11-11T10:38:46Z Aspergillus flavus resident in Kenya: high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation-driven evolution Islam, M.S. Callicott, K.A. Mutegi, C. Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit Cotty, P.J. aspergillus flavus genetic variation reproduction evolution aflatoxins simple sequence repeat Aspergillus flavus has long been considered to be an asexual species. Although a sexual stage was recently reported for this species from in vitro studies, the amount of recombination ongoing in natural populations and the genetic distance across which meiosis occurs is largely unknown. In the current study, genetic diversity, reproduction and evolution of natural A. flavus populations endemic to Kenya were examined. A total of 2744 isolates recovered from 629 maize-field soils across southern Kenya in two consecutive seasons were characterized at 17 SSR loci, revealing high genetic diversity (9-72 alleles/locus and 2140 haplotypes). Clonal reproduction and persistence of clonal lineages predominated, with many identical haplotypes occurring in multiple soil samples and both seasons. Genetic analyses predicted three distinct lineages with linkage disequilibrium and evolutionary relationships among haplotypes within each lineage suggesting mutation-driven evolution followed by clonal reproduction. Low genetic differentiation among adjacent communities reflected frequent short distance dispersal. 2018-10 2018-11-01T10:47:04Z 2018-11-01T10:47:04Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97855 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Islam, M.S., Callicott, K.A., Mutegi, C., Bandyopadhyay, R. & Cotty, P.J. (2018). Aspergillus flavus resident in Kenya: high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation-driven evolution. Fungal Ecology, 35, 20-33.
spellingShingle aspergillus flavus
genetic variation
reproduction
evolution
aflatoxins
simple sequence repeat
Islam, M.S.
Callicott, K.A.
Mutegi, C.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Cotty, P.J.
Aspergillus flavus resident in Kenya: high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation-driven evolution
title Aspergillus flavus resident in Kenya: high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation-driven evolution
title_full Aspergillus flavus resident in Kenya: high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation-driven evolution
title_fullStr Aspergillus flavus resident in Kenya: high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation-driven evolution
title_full_unstemmed Aspergillus flavus resident in Kenya: high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation-driven evolution
title_short Aspergillus flavus resident in Kenya: high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation-driven evolution
title_sort aspergillus flavus resident in kenya high genetic diversity in an ancient population primarily shaped by clonal reproduction and mutation driven evolution
topic aspergillus flavus
genetic variation
reproduction
evolution
aflatoxins
simple sequence repeat
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97855
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