Ancient tripartite coevolution in the attine ant-microbe symbiosis |
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Authors: | Currie Cameron R Wong Bess Stuart Alison E Schultz Ted R Rehner Stephen A Mueller Ulrich G Sung Gi-Ho Spatafora Joseph W Straus Neil A |
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Affiliation: | Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA. ccurrie@ku.edu |
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Abstract: | The symbiosis between fungus-growing ants and the fungi they cultivate for food has been shaped by 50 million years of coevolution. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that this long coevolutionary history includes a third symbiont lineage: specialized microfungal parasites of the ants' fungus gardens. At ancient levels, the phylogenies of the three symbionts are perfectly congruent, revealing that the ant-microbe symbiosis is the product of tripartite coevolution between the farming ants, their cultivars, and the garden parasites. At recent phylogenetic levels, coevolution has been punctuated by occasional host-switching by the parasite, thus intensifying continuous coadaptation between symbionts in a tripartite arms race. |
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