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Pepijn Wilhelmus Kooij

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Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP). Campus de Rio Claro. Instituto de Biociências (IB)  (Instituição Sede da última proposta de pesquisa)
País de origem: Holanda

Obtained BSc Biology - Wageningen University (2007), MSc Biology - Wageningen University (2009) and PhD Biology - Ecology and Evolution - University of Copenhagen (2014). Worked as Early Career Research Fellow at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (2015-2020) and Young Researcher Talent at UNESP - Rio Claro (2020-2023), funded through the CAPES-PrInt program. Has experience in the areas of Ecology, Evolution, Genomics, Phylogenetics, Mycology, and Myrmecology. Currently has a FAPESP-JP grant at UNESP - Rio Claro at the Laboratory for Ecology and Systematics of Fungi (LESF).My research focuses on the evolution of mutualistic interactions and in particular the intricate relationship between fungus-growing ants and their fungal crops. I work on the phylogenetic placement of these fungi in the family Agaricaceae and compare the genomes of the symbiotic fungi with free-living relatives. My expertise includes phylogenetics and comparative genomics.My current project aims to understand the maintenance of mutualistic symbioses. Partners in a mutualism are in a constant conflict, with each gaining the highest benefit when the partner allocates the most resources for the least costs. In mutualisms, sexual reproduction is often controlled by the host via unknown mechanisms. Asexuality occurs frequently among polyploid organisms, such as human fruit crops, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and the fungus grown by ants. The fungus-growing ant mutualism is an obligate relationship where each partner is dependent on the other for survival, which parallels human crop domestication. By keeping the fungal symbiont asexual, ants are able to keep it genetically stable, preventing the integration of recombined DNA, and avoiding resource allocation to the sexual organs of the fungus. The aim is to analyze the regulation of asexuality in the fungus grown by ants as influenced by polyploidy and the presence of a third party, a mycovirus, as mycoviruses have been shown to castrate human cultivated fungi. This project will combine high-throughput sequencing tools with in vitro experiments to determine the degree to which genetic diversity in the fungus correlates to efficiency as a mutualist (i.e. the tendency for the fungus not to divert energy into sexual reproduction). It will also analyze the degree to which the ants are able to affect rates and targets of methylation of fungal genes which effectively turns sets of genes on and off. Finally, it will investigate the presence and role of mycoviruses in asexuality. (Fonte: Currículo Lattes)

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