4.6 Article

Tremella macrobasidiata and Tremella variae have abundant and widespread yeast stages in Lecanora lichens

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages 2484-2498

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.15455

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [VR 2016-03589]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Science [CGL2016-80371-P]
  3. Swedish Taxonomy Initiative [STI 2016-27 4.3]

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Dimorphism is a common feature of tremellalean fungi, with Tremella macrobasidiata and Tremella variae showing an abundant yeast stage in their life cycles associated with Lecanora lichens. The sexual filamentous stage is restricted to specific lichen species for each Tremella, while the yeast stage can be more versatile. This research suggests a wider distribution and abundance of lichen-associated Tremella than previously thought, prompting new questions about their biology and ecology in symbiosis.
Dimorphism is a widespread feature of tremellalean fungi in general, but a little-studied aspect of the biology of lichen-associated Tremella. We show that Tremella macrobasidiata and Tremella variae have an abundant and widespread yeast stage in their life cycles that occurs in Lecanora lichens. Their sexual filamentous stage is restricted to a specific lichen: T. macrobasidiata only forms basidiomata on Lecanora chlarotera hymenia and T. variae only on Lecanora varia thalli. However, the yeast stage of T. macrobasidiata is less specific and can occur in L. varia lichens, whilst all life stages of T. variae may be specific to L. varia. Contrary to the hyphal stages, the yeasts are distributed across the thalli and hymenia of Lecanora lichens, and not limited to specimens with basidiomata. Tremella macrobasidiata was present in all studied L. chlarotera, and in 59% of L. varia specimens. Only in 8% of the L. varia thalli could none of the two Tremella species be detected. Our results indicate that lichen-associated Tremella may be much more abundant and widespread than previously assumed leading to skewed estimations about their distribution ranges and lichen specificity, and raise new questions about their biology, ecology and function in the symbiosis.

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