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  • A tale of two lineages: how...
    Berckx, Fede; Nguyen, Thanh Van; Bandong, Cyndi Mae; Lin, Hsiao-Han; Yamanaka, Takashi; Katayama, Sae; Wibberg, Daniel; Blom, Jochen; Kalinowski, Jörn; Tateno, Masaki; Simbahan, Jessica; Liu, Chi-Te; Brachmann, Andreas; Pawlowski, Katharina

    BMC genomics, 08/2022, Letnik: 23, Številka: 1
    Journal Article

    It is currently assumed that around 100 million years ago, the common ancestor to the Fabales, Fagales, Rosales and Cucurbitales in Gondwana, developed a root nodule symbiosis with a nitrogen-fixing bacterium. The symbiotic trait evolved first in Frankia cluster-2; thus, strains belonging to this cluster are the best extant representatives of this original symbiont. Most cluster-2 strains could not be cultured to date, except for Frankia coriariae, and therefore many aspects of the symbiosis are still elusive. Based on phylogenetics of cluster-2 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), it has been shown that the genomes of strains originating in Eurasia are highly conserved. These MAGs are more closely related to Frankia cluster-2 in North America than to the single genome available thus far from the southern hemisphere, i.e., from Papua New Guinea.