0000000000757665

AUTHOR

Luz B. Gilbert

showing 1 related works from this author

Genome of an arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus provides insight into the oldest plant symbiosis

2013

International audience; The mutualistic symbiosis involving Glomeromycota, a distinctive phylum of early diverging Fungi, is widely hypothesized to have promoted the evolution of land plants during the middle Paleozoic. These arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) perform vital functions in the phosphorus cycle that are fundamental to sustainable crop plant productivity. The unusual biological features of AMF have long fascinated evolutionary biologists. The coenocytic hyphae host a community of hundreds of nuclei and reproduce clonally through large multinucleated spores. It has been suggested that the AMF maintain a stable assemblage of several different genomes during the life cycle, but thi…

0106 biological sciencesRhizophagus irregularismutualism[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Molecular Sequence DataFungus01 natural sciencesGenomecarbohydrate-active enzymes; effector; fungal evolution; glomales; mutualismGlomeromycotaEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesSymbiosisMycorrhizaeBotanyGlomeromycotaSymbiosisGenefungal evolution030304 developmental biologyGenomic organizationMucoromycotina0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarybiology[ SDV ] Life Sciences [q-bio]Base SequencefungiglomalesSequence Analysis DNA15. Life on landPlantsBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationeffectorEvolutionary biologycarbohydrate-active enzymesGenome Fungal010606 plant biology & botany
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