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Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are important plant symbionts that have long been considered evolutionary anomalies because of their apparent long‐term lack of sexuality, but recent explorations of available DNA sequence have challenged this notion by revealing the presence of homologues of fungal mating type–high‐mobility group (MATA‐HMG) and core meiotic genes in these organisms.To obtain more...
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) represent an ecologically relevant and evolutionarily intriguing group of land plant symbionts, which produce multinucleated spores and hyphae that are currently thought to have propagated clonally for over 500 million years. This long-term absence of sex in AMF is a puzzling evolutionary feature that has sparked scientific interest for some time, but a provoking...
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