Publication Date:
2024-01-12
Description:
Mucor species are common soil fungi but also known as agents of human infections (mucormycosis)
\nand used in food production and biotechnology. Mucor circinelloides is the Mucor species that is most frequently
\nisolated from clinical sources. The taxonomy of Mucor circinelloides and its close relatives (Mucor circinelloides
\ncomplex \xe2\x80\x93 MCC) is still based on morphology and mating behaviour. The aim of the present study was a revised
\ntaxonomy of the MCC using a polyphasic approach. Using a set of 100 strains molecular phylogenetic analysis of
\nfive markers (ITS, rpb1, tsr1, mcm7, and cfs, introduced here) were performed, combined with phenotypic studies,
\nmating tests and the determination of the maximum growth temperatures. The multi-locus analyses revealed 16
\nphylogenetic species of which 14 showed distinct phenotypical traits and were recognised as discrete species.
\nFive of these species are introduced as novel taxa: M. amethystinus sp. nov., M. atramentarius sp. nov., M. variicolumellatus sp. nov., M. pseudocircinelloides sp. nov., and M. pseudolusitanicus sp. nov. The former formae of
\nM. circinelloides represent one or two separate species. In the MCC, the simple presence of well-shaped zygospores
\nonly indicates a close relation of both strains, but not necessarily conspecificity. Seven species of the MCC have
\nbeen implemented in human infection: M. circinelloides, M. griseocyanus, M. janssenii, M. lusitanicus, M. ramosissimus, M. variicolumellatus, and M. velutinosus
Keywords:
Ecology
;
Evolution
;
Behavior and Systematics
;
mating tests
;
maximum growth temperature
;
Mucor
;
mucormycosis
;
new taxa
;
phylogeny
;
taxonomy
;
zygospore formation
Repository Name:
National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
Type:
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Format:
application/pdf
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