Jm. Moncalvo et al., PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS IN GANODERMA INFERRED FROM THE INTERNAL TRANSCRIBED SPACERS AND 25S RIBOSOMAL DNA-SEQUENCES, Mycologia, 87(2), 1995, pp. 223-238
Over 250 species have been described in Ganoderma. Species identificat
ion and species circumscription are often unclear and taxonomic segreg
ation of the genus remains controversial. In this study we sequenced t
he 5' half of the 25S ribosomal RNA gene and the internal transcribed
spacers to determine appropriate regions to i) discriminate between Ga
noderma species and ii) infer taxonomic segregation of Ganoderma s. la
to (Ganodermataceae) on a phylogenetic basis. We studied 19 Ganoderma
isolates representing 14 species classified in 5 subgenera and section
s, one isolate of the related genus Amaurodemna, and one isolate of Fo
mitopsis which served as the outgroup in parsimony analysis. Results s
howed that a transition bias was present in our data, and that rates o
f nucleotide divergence in the different ribosomal regions varied betw
een lineages. Independent and combined analyses of different data sets
were performed and results were discussed. Nucleotide sequences of th
e internal transcribed spacers, but not those of the coding regions, d
istinguished between most Ganoderma species, and indicated that isolat
es of the G. tsugae group were misnamed. Phylogenetic analysis of the
combined data sets of the divergent domain D2 of the 25S ribosomal RNA
gene and of the internal transcribed spacers indicated that subgenus
Elfvingia was monophyletic, whereas sections Characoderma and Phaeonem
a were not. Combined data from these regions is useful for infrageneri
c segregation of Ganoderma on a phylogenetic basis. Phylogenetic analy
sis from data of the D2 region alone strongly supported Amauroderma as
a sister taxon of Ganoderma. This suggested that the D2 region should
be suitable for systematics at higher taxonomic ranks in the Ganoderm
ataceae. The low sequence variation observed in the 25S ribosomal gene
within Ganoderma species suggested that the genus is young.