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Evolution and ecology of the Ceanothus-Frankia symbiosis

Posted on:1999-03-13Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Oregon State UniversityCandidate:Jeong, Soon-ChunFull Text:PDF
GTID:2460390014971245Subject:Ecology
Abstract/Summary:
The evolutionary relationship between Frankia and actinorhizal plants was evaluated by reconstructing molecular phylogenetic trees from nifH, 16S rDNA, and rbcL nucleotide sequences. Subgroupings in Frankia phylogenetic trees reconstructed from nifH and from 16S rDNA sequences were consistent in terms of plant origins of Frankia strains. Although the branching order of Frankia 16S rDNA and plant rbcL trees were different, subgroupings of Frankia and of plants correlated well in terms of symbiotic partnership. Tree matching, estimated divergence times, and molecular clock hypothesis tests indicated that Frankia clades diverged more recently than plant clades and that actinorhizal symbioses originated more than three times after the plant clades diverged.;Specificity between Ceanothus species and their Frankia microsymbionts was evaluated by analysis of DNA in nodules collected from three copopulations of Ceanothus species. Sequencing of the intergenic spacer region between 16S and 23S trap plants showed no significant difference. Most nodules could fix ;A phylogenetic tree of Ceanothus species, which are symbiotic partners of Frankia, was reconstructed using ndhF gene sequences. The analysis identified two main clades corresponding to two subgenera: Ceanothus and Cerastes. The analysis also suggested that three monophyletic clades within the subgenus Ceanothus can be delimited on the basis of vegetative characters. Based on rbcL sequences, the two subgenera diverged 18-39 million years ago whereas species within each subgenus diverged more recently. These results support the current division of Ceanothus into two monophyletic subgenera and agree with the postulated recent divergence of many species within each subgenus.
Keywords/Search Tags:Frankia, Ceanothus, 16S rdna, Species, Plant
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