Affiliation:
1. Department of Entomology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
Abstract
The genus
Metarhizium
and
Pochonia chlamydosporia
comprise a monophyletic clade of highly abundant globally distributed fungi that can transition between long-term beneficial associations with plants to transitory pathogenic associations with frequently encountered protozoans, nematodes or insects. Some very common ‘specialist generalist’ species are adapted to particular soil and plant ecologies, but can overpower a wide spectrum of insects with numerous enzymes and toxins that result from extensive gene duplications made possible by loss of meiosis and associated genome defence mechanisms. These species use parasexuality instead of sex to combine beneficial mutations from separate clonal individuals into one genome (Vicar of Bray dynamics). More weakly endophytic species which kill a narrow range of insects retain sexuality to facilitate host–pathogen coevolution (Red Queen dynamics).
Metarhizium
species can fit into numerous environments because they are very flexible at the genetic, physiological and ecological levels, providing tractable models to address how new mechanisms for econutritional heterogeneity, host switching and virulence are acquired and relate to diverse sexual life histories and speciation. Many new molecules and functions have been discovered that underpin
Metarhizium
associations, and have furthered our understanding of the crucial ecology of these fungi in multiple habitats.
Funder
Plant Biotic Program of the National Science Foundation and the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture
Hatch project from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture
Subject
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Immunology,General Neuroscience
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103 articles.
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