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Dive into the research topics where Hanna Johannesson is active.

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Featured researches published by Hanna Johannesson.


Science | 2016

Basidiomycete yeasts in the cortex of ascomycete macrolichens

Toby Spribille; Veera Tuovinen; Philipp Resl; Dan Vanderpool; Heimo Wolinski; M. Catherine Aime; Kevin Schneider; Edith Stabentheiner; Merje Toome-Heller; Göran Thor; Helmut Mayrhofer; Hanna Johannesson; John P. McCutcheon

Lichens assemble in three parts Lichen growth forms cannot be recapitulated in the laboratory by culturing the plant and fungal partners together. Spribille et al. have discovered that the classical binary view of lichens is too simple. Instead, North American beard-like lichens are constituted of not two but three symbiotic partners: an ascomycetous fungus, a photosynthetic alga, and, unexpectedly, a basidiomycetous yeast. The yeast cells form the characteristic cortex of the lichen thallus and may be important for its shape. The yeasts are ubiquitous and essential partners for most lichens and not the result of lichens being colonized or parasitized by other organisms. Science, this issue p. 488 Complete functioning lichen thalli have three partners: alga and ascomycete, plus a basidiomycete yeast. For over 140 years, lichens have been regarded as a symbiosis between a single fungus, usually an ascomycete, and a photosynthesizing partner. Other fungi have long been known to occur as occasional parasites or endophytes, but the one lichen–one fungus paradigm has seldom been questioned. Here we show that many common lichens are composed of the known ascomycete, the photosynthesizing partner, and, unexpectedly, specific basidiomycete yeasts. These yeasts are embedded in the cortex, and their abundance correlates with previously unexplained variations in phenotype. Basidiomycete lineages maintain close associations with specific lichen species over large geographical distances and have been found on six continents. The structurally important lichen cortex, long treated as a zone of differentiated ascomycete cells, appears to consistently contain two unrelated fungi.


Biological Conservation | 2001

Post-fire legacy of ectomycorrhizal fungal communities in the Swedish boreal forest in relation to fire severity and logging intensity

Anders Dahlberg; Johnny Schimmel; Andy F. S. Taylor; Hanna Johannesson

Swedish foresters are placing increasing reliance in burning of forestland and green tree retention, in order to enhance biodiversity in the Swedish boreal forests. However, much remains to be learned about how to optimise nature conservation goals by different logging and burning procedures. We monitored the survival of ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi as mycorrhizas, at a clear-cut, a seed tree stand and an uncut stand of Scots pine in central Sweden, with and without burning at two levels of fire severity. The abundance of mycorrhizas and the EM fungal diversity declined with increased logging intensity and with increased depth of burn. Deep burning fires in combination with logging or fire-caused tree mortality can kill much of the existing EM community. Logging intensity, fire intensity and fire severity are all factors that can be manipulated, thus changing the effects on EM fungi and other soil biota.


PLOS Genetics | 2008

The Mating-Type Chromosome in the Filamentous Ascomycete Neurospora tetrasperma Represents a Model for Early Evolution of Sex Chromosomes

Audrius Menkis; David J. Jacobson; Tim Gustafsson; Hanna Johannesson

We combined gene divergence data, classical genetics, and phylogenetics to study the evolution of the mating-type chromosome in the filamentous ascomycete Neurospora tetrasperma. In this species, a large non-recombining region of the mating-type chromosome is associated with a unique fungal life cycle where self-fertility is enforced by maintenance of a constant state of heterokaryosis. Sequence divergence between alleles of 35 genes from the two single mating-type component strains (i.e. the homokaryotic mat A or mat a-strains), derived from one N. tetrasperma heterokaryon (mat A+mat a), was analyzed. By this approach we were able to identify the boundaries and size of the non-recombining region, and reveal insight into the history of recombination cessation. The non-recombining region covers almost 7 Mbp, over 75% of the chromosome, and we hypothesize that the evolution of the mating-type chromosome in this lineage involved two successive events. The first event was contemporaneous with the split of N. tetrasperma from a common ancestor with its outcrossing relative N. crassa and suppressed recombination over at least 6.6 Mbp, and the second was confined to a smaller region in which recombination ceased more recently. In spite of the early origin of the first “evolutionary stratum”, genealogies of five genes from strains belonging to an additional N. tetrasperma lineage indicate independent initiations of suppressed recombination in different phylogenetic lineages. This study highlights the shared features between the sex chromosomes found in the animal and plant kingdoms and the fungal mating-type chromosome, despite fungi having no separate sexes. As is often found in sex chromosomes of plants and animals, recombination suppression of the mating-type chromosome of N. tetrasperma involved more than one evolutionary event, covers the majority of the mating-type chromosome and is flanked by distal regions with obligate crossovers.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2003

Molecular markers reveal genetic isolation and phylogeography of the S and F intersterility groups of the wood-decay fungus Heterobasidion annosum.

Hanna Johannesson; Jan Stenlid

The root-rot fungus Heterobasidion annosum (Fr.) Bref. species complex consists of three intersterility groups (S, F, and P), separated by their host affinity. The phylogenetic relationship of the species complex was studied, with the focus on the S and F groups, by comparing DNA sequences of four nuclear gene fragments: calmodulin, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, heat stress protein 80-1, and elongation factor 1-alpha, and one anonymous locus, from 29 fungal isolates originating from Europe, Asia, and North America. The phylogeny of each separate gene locus as well as the combined dataset consisted of three main clades: European F group isolates, Euroasian S group isolates, and North American S group isolates, suggesting them to be separated into phylogenetic species. The results also support the hypothesis of an early separation between the S and F groups, indicating that their distribution have followed their host tree species for a considerable time period.


Forest Ecology and Management | 1999

Molecular identification of wood-inhabiting fungi in an unmanaged Picea abies forest in Sweden

Hanna Johannesson; Jan Stenlid

Abstract Based on variation in ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) DNA a method was developed to identify wood-inhabiting fungi without being dependent on fruit body formation or direct identification of mycelia isolated from wood. A reference library containing restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) profiles of 39 fungal species was constructed by digesting the amplified ITS region with three endonucleases (Cfo1, Hinf1 and Mbo1). To test the method, early succession of wood-inhabiting fungi was studied in an unmanaged Picea abies forest in Sweden. Fungal species that were present in wood in and at the border of two canopy gaps and a randomly chosen transect of the forest were identified. Bore core samples were taken from 78 standing trees and snags at two gaps and from 30 standing trees positioned in the closed stand. DNA was extracted both directly from wood and from mycelia isolated from wood. Fifteen samples from wood or mycelia from wood were identified as Armillaria borealis, Coniophora arida, Fomitopsis pinicola, Heterobasidion annosum or Resinicium bicolor by comparing RFLP profiles.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2002

Transmission of double-stranded RNA in Heterobasidion annosum.

Katarina Ihrmark; Hanna Johannesson; Elna Stenström; Jan Stenlid

Transmission of dsRNA viruses between homo- and heterokaryotic mycelia paired on agar plates and into conidia has been studied in Heterobasidion annosum. Horizontal transmission of dsRNA occurred between both homo- and heterokaryotic isolates, as well as between isolates belonging to different intersterility groups. The proportions of vertical transmission into conidia were 3% and 55%, respectively, for the two isolates included in the study. RT-PCR of dsRNA and PCR-RFLP of mitochondrial markers were used to confirm transmission of dsRNA between the cytoplasms of different mycelia. The identity of nuclei and nuclear migration during experiments were verified using PCR-RFLP of several nuclear markers.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2011

A comprehensive phylogeny of Neurospora reveals a link between reproductive mode and molecular evolution in fungi

Kristiina Nygren; Rebecka Strandberg; Andreas Wallberg; Benoit Nabholz; Tim Gustafsson; Dania García; José Cano; Josep Guarro; Hanna Johannesson

The filamentous ascomycete genus Neurospora encompasses taxa with a wide range of reproductive modes. Sexual reproduction in this genus can be divided into three major modes; heterothallism (self-incompatibility), homothallism (self-compatibility) and pseudohomothallism (partial self-compatibility). In addition to the sexual pathway, most of the heterothallic taxa propagate with morphologically distinct, vegetative dissemination propagules (macroconidia), while this feature is undetected in the majority of the homothallic taxa. In this study, we used sequence information of seven nuclear gene loci from 43 taxa (295 of the possible 301 locus-by-taxon combinations) to create a phylogeny of Neurospora. The results suggest that transitions in reproductive mode have occurred at multiple times within this group of fungi. Although a homothallic ancestor would imply fewer switches in reproductive mode, we argue that the ancestor of Neurospora was likely heterothallic and that homothallism has evolved independently at least six times in the evolutionary history of the genus. Furthermore, the two pseudohomothallic taxa of Neurospora (N. tetrasperma and N. tetraspora) represent two independent origins of pseudohomothallism. Likelihood ratio tests of substitution rates among branches in the phylogeny indicate that reproductive mode is an important factor driving genome evolution in Neurospora. First, an increased level of non-synonymous/synonymous substitutions in branches delineating homothallic taxa was found, suggesting a reduced efficiency of purifying selection in these taxa. Furthermore, elevated nucleotide substitution rates were found in heterothallic, conidia-producing, lineages as compared to the homothallic non-conidiating lineages. The latter finding is likely due to the presence of conidia, i.e., a higher rate of mitotic divisions inducing mutations, and/or that the homothallic taxa have evolved a lower mutation rate to avoid genomic degeneration.


Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 2016

The Ecology and Evolutionary Dynamics of Meiotic Drive

Anna K. Lindholm; Kelly A. Dyer; Renée C. Firman; Lila Fishman; Wolfgang Forstmeier; Luke Holman; Hanna Johannesson; Ulrich Knief; Hanna Kokko; Amanda M. Larracuente; Andri Manser; Catherine Montchamp-Moreau; V. G. Petrosyan; Andrew Pomiankowski; Daven C. Presgraves; L. D. Safronova; Andreas Sutter; Robert L. Unckless; Rudi L. Verspoor; Nina Wedell; Gerald S. Wilkinson; Tom A. R. Price

Meiotic drivers are genetic variants that selfishly manipulate the production of gametes to increase their own rate of transmission, often to the detriment of the rest of the genome and the individual that carries them. This genomic conflict potentially occurs whenever a diploid organism produces a haploid stage, and can have profound evolutionary impacts on gametogenesis, fertility, individual behaviour, mating system, population survival, and reproductive isolation. Multiple research teams are developing artificial drive systems for pest control, utilising the transmission advantage of drive to alter or exterminate target species. Here, we review current knowledge of how natural drive systems function, how drivers spread through natural populations, and the factors that limit their invasion.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2008

The evolutionary trajectory of the mating-type (mat) genes in Neurospora relates to reproductive behavior of taxa

Lotta Wik; Magnus Karlsson; Hanna Johannesson

BackgroundComparative sequencing studies among a wide range of taxonomic groups, including fungi, have led to the discovery that reproductive genes evolve more rapidly than other genes. However, for fungal reproductive genes the question has remained whether the rapid evolution is a result of stochastic or deterministic processes. The mating-type (mat) genes constitute the master regulators of sexual reproduction in filamentous ascomycetes and here we present a study of the molecular evolution of the four mat-genes (mat a-1, mat A-1, mat A-2 and mat A-3) of 20 Neurospora taxa.ResultsWe estimated nonsynonymous and synonymous substitution rates of genes to infer their evolutionary rate, and confirmed that the mat-genes evolve rapidly. Furthermore, the evolutionary trajectories are related to the reproductive modes of the taxa; likelihood methods revealed that positive selection acting on specific codons drives the diversity in heterothallic taxa, while among homothallic taxa the rapid evolution is due to a lack of selective constraint. The latter finding is supported by presence of stop codons and frame shift mutations disrupting the open reading frames of mat a-1, mat A-2 and mat A-3 in homothallic taxa. Lower selective constraints of mat-genes was found among homothallic than heterothallic taxa, and comparisons with non-reproductive genes argue that this disparity is not a nonspecific, genome-wide phenomenon.ConclusionOur data show that the mat-genes evolve rapidly in Neurospora. The rapid divergence is due to either adaptive evolution or lack of selective constraints, depending on the reproductive mode of the taxa. This is the first instance of positive selection acting on reproductive genes in the fungal kingdom, and illustrates how the evolutionary trajectory of reproductive genes can change after a switch in reproductive behaviour of an organism.


Evolution | 2008

Evolutionary significance of imbalanced nuclear ratios within heterokaryons of the basidiomycete fungus Heterobasidion parviporum

Timothy Y. James; Jan Stenlid; Åke Olson; Hanna Johannesson

Abstract Many fungi have heterokaryotic life stages in which genetically different nuclei inhabit the same cell. In basidiomycetes, the heterokaryon is the product of mating and represents a genomic union very similar to a diploid thallus, yet the maintenance of unfused nuclei suggests a more complex association of the two genomes relative to diploidy. In species with variable numbers of nuclei per heterokaryotic cell, nuclear ratios within a mycelium may possibly become imbalanced (differ from 1:1) due to nuclear competition. In this study, heterokaryons of the basidiomycete Heterobasidion parviporum were examined to determine the effects of genotype and environment on nuclear ratios within vegetative mycelia. The data reveal that nuclear ratios are frequently imbalanced, generally stable over time, and genetically determined. The nuclear ratios were affected by environment, but the observed nuclear ratios did not follow the expectations of strong selection acting on a population of nuclei. Instead, these ratios were largely driven by genetic effects and epigenetic effects. Finally, the data suggest that nuclear ratio imbalance also affects both gene transcription and growth rate, implying that heterokaryotic basidiomycetes are not functionally equivalent to diploid individuals and have a higher potential for genotypic and phenotypic variation.

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Jan Stenlid

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Magnus Karlsson

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Audrius Menkis

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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