Variation within the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) of
the ribosomal RNA gene of 15 isolates representing seven
European Armillaria species, was examined by sequencing of the
PCR-amplified products. The analysis of an 744-bp region showed that the
5.8S gene
appeared to be highly conserved in the 15 isolates and in other Basidiomycetes
and Ascomycetes, whereas ITS1 and especially ITS2 spacers exhibited
polymorphisms due to base substitutions,
insertions or deletions of up to eight nucleotides. An initial dendrogram
for the full sequence was drawn using
cluster analysis (UPGMA), and a tree was constructed using the maximum
parsimony method. Both methods
indicated that the isolates could be divided into four major groups. One
group, consisting of A. ectypa, was distinct
from all the other species. Examination of the other groups indicated that
A. tabescens and A. mellea were in a
separated cluster, with a significant variation between the two isolates
of the latter species. A. gallica and
A. cepistipes constituted another closely related group distinguishable
from A. ostoyae and A. borealis, these latter
two species exhibiting the highest similarity. The results are consistent
with, and discussed in regard to, the
relationships estimated previously by pairing tests, morphological and
physiological comparisons, as well as by
restriction fragment length polymorphism of the rDNA.