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Insights into the Life Cycle of Yeasts from the CTG Clade Revealed by the Analysis of the Millerozyma (Pichia) farinosa Species Complex

Among ascomycetous yeasts, the CTG clade is so-called because its constituent species translate CTG as serine instead of leucine. Though the biology of certain pathogenic species such as Candida albicans has been much studied, little is known about the life cycles of non-pathogen species of the CTG...

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Autores principales: Mallet, Sandrine, Weiss, Stéphanie, Jacques, Noémie, Leh-Louis, Véronique, Sacerdot, Christine, Casaregola, Serge
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3344839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22574125
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035842
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author Mallet, Sandrine
Weiss, Stéphanie
Jacques, Noémie
Leh-Louis, Véronique
Sacerdot, Christine
Casaregola, Serge
author_facet Mallet, Sandrine
Weiss, Stéphanie
Jacques, Noémie
Leh-Louis, Véronique
Sacerdot, Christine
Casaregola, Serge
author_sort Mallet, Sandrine
collection PubMed
description Among ascomycetous yeasts, the CTG clade is so-called because its constituent species translate CTG as serine instead of leucine. Though the biology of certain pathogenic species such as Candida albicans has been much studied, little is known about the life cycles of non-pathogen species of the CTG clade. Taking advantage of the recently obtained sequence of the biotechnological Millerozyma (Pichiasorbitophila) farinosa strain CBS 7064, we used MLST to better define phylogenic relationships between most of the Millerozyma farinosa strains available in public collections. This led to the constitution of four phylogenetic clades diverging from 8% to 15% at the DNA level and possibly constituting a species complex (M. farinosa) and to the proposal of two new species:Millerozyma miso sp. nov. CBS 2004(T) ( = CLIB 1230(T)) and Candida pseudofarinosa sp. nov.NCYC 386(T)( = CLIB 1231(T)).Further analysis showed that M. farinosa isolates exist as haploid and inter-clade hybrids. Despite the sequence divergence between the clades, secondary contacts after reproductive isolation were evidenced, as revealed by both introgression and mitochondria transfer between clades. We also showed that the inter-clade hybrids do sporulate to generate mainly viable vegetative diploid spores that are not the result of meiosis, and very rarely aneuploid spores possibly through the loss of heterozygosity during sporulation. Taken together, these results show that in this part of the CTG clade, non-Mendelian genetic exchanges occur at high rates through hybridization between divergent strainsfrom distinct clades and subsequent massive loss of heterozygosity. This combination of mechanisms could constitute an alternative sexuality leading to an unsuspected biodiversity.
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spelling pubmed-33448392012-05-09 Insights into the Life Cycle of Yeasts from the CTG Clade Revealed by the Analysis of the Millerozyma (Pichia) farinosa Species Complex Mallet, Sandrine Weiss, Stéphanie Jacques, Noémie Leh-Louis, Véronique Sacerdot, Christine Casaregola, Serge PLoS One Research Article Among ascomycetous yeasts, the CTG clade is so-called because its constituent species translate CTG as serine instead of leucine. Though the biology of certain pathogenic species such as Candida albicans has been much studied, little is known about the life cycles of non-pathogen species of the CTG clade. Taking advantage of the recently obtained sequence of the biotechnological Millerozyma (Pichiasorbitophila) farinosa strain CBS 7064, we used MLST to better define phylogenic relationships between most of the Millerozyma farinosa strains available in public collections. This led to the constitution of four phylogenetic clades diverging from 8% to 15% at the DNA level and possibly constituting a species complex (M. farinosa) and to the proposal of two new species:Millerozyma miso sp. nov. CBS 2004(T) ( = CLIB 1230(T)) and Candida pseudofarinosa sp. nov.NCYC 386(T)( = CLIB 1231(T)).Further analysis showed that M. farinosa isolates exist as haploid and inter-clade hybrids. Despite the sequence divergence between the clades, secondary contacts after reproductive isolation were evidenced, as revealed by both introgression and mitochondria transfer between clades. We also showed that the inter-clade hybrids do sporulate to generate mainly viable vegetative diploid spores that are not the result of meiosis, and very rarely aneuploid spores possibly through the loss of heterozygosity during sporulation. Taken together, these results show that in this part of the CTG clade, non-Mendelian genetic exchanges occur at high rates through hybridization between divergent strainsfrom distinct clades and subsequent massive loss of heterozygosity. This combination of mechanisms could constitute an alternative sexuality leading to an unsuspected biodiversity. Public Library of Science 2012-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3344839/ /pubmed/22574125 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035842 Text en Mallet et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mallet, Sandrine
Weiss, Stéphanie
Jacques, Noémie
Leh-Louis, Véronique
Sacerdot, Christine
Casaregola, Serge
Insights into the Life Cycle of Yeasts from the CTG Clade Revealed by the Analysis of the Millerozyma (Pichia) farinosa Species Complex
title Insights into the Life Cycle of Yeasts from the CTG Clade Revealed by the Analysis of the Millerozyma (Pichia) farinosa Species Complex
title_full Insights into the Life Cycle of Yeasts from the CTG Clade Revealed by the Analysis of the Millerozyma (Pichia) farinosa Species Complex
title_fullStr Insights into the Life Cycle of Yeasts from the CTG Clade Revealed by the Analysis of the Millerozyma (Pichia) farinosa Species Complex
title_full_unstemmed Insights into the Life Cycle of Yeasts from the CTG Clade Revealed by the Analysis of the Millerozyma (Pichia) farinosa Species Complex
title_short Insights into the Life Cycle of Yeasts from the CTG Clade Revealed by the Analysis of the Millerozyma (Pichia) farinosa Species Complex
title_sort insights into the life cycle of yeasts from the ctg clade revealed by the analysis of the millerozyma (pichia) farinosa species complex
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3344839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22574125
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035842
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