Literature DB >> 1644274

Mating type switching in the tetrapolar basidiomycete Agrocybe aegerita.

J Labarère1, T Noël.   

Abstract

The study of fruiting in the basidiomycete Agrocybe aegerita has shown that some haploid homokaryotic strains can spontaneously switch their mating specificities at the two unlinked A and B mating type factors. This event causes the dikaryotisation of primary homokaryons without plasmogamy and leads to the differentiation of sporulating fruit-bodies (pseudo-homokaryotic fruiting). For each mating type factor, the genetic analyses have revealed that: (1) parental and switched mating types segregate meiotically as Mendelian markers, (2) a total of six switched mating type factors (two parental and four nonparental) were obtained from a wild strain, (3) most of the nonparental factors have specificities differing from those of a large series of wild factors, (4) strains with the same expressed mating type can generate different specificities, (5) switching is always restricted to the same mating type in a homokaryon, (6) nonparental types can switch again, and (7) meiosis fixes the specificities to which switching can occur. This suggests, for the first time in filamentous fungi, the existence of a mechanism analogous to the mating type switching in yeasts. We hypothese that both A and B mating type regions in A. aegerita are constituted of three loci, one specialized in expression and two other carrying silent information. Mating type switching in homokaryotic strains would occur by copy transposition of silent A and B information into the expression loci. Moreover, we propose that during meiosis the silent loci are substituted by copies of the expressed loci.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1644274      PMCID: PMC1205006     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genetics        ISSN: 0016-6731            Impact factor:   4.562


  6 in total

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Authors:  J R Raper; M G Baxter; R B Middleton
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2.  THE GENETIC STRUCTURE OF THE INCOMPATIBILITY FACTORS OF SCHIZOPHYLLUM COMMUNE: THE A-FACTOR.

Authors:  J R Raper; M G Baxter; A H Ellingboe
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1960-06       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Molecular analysis of the Coprinus cinereus mating type A factor demonstrates an unexpectedly complex structure.

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4.  The b alleles of U. maydis, whose combinations program pathogenic development, code for polypeptides containing a homeodomain-related motif.

Authors:  B Schulz; F Banuett; M Dahl; R Schlesinger; W Schäfer; T Martin; I Herskowitz; R Kahmann
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Review 5.  The role of similarity and difference in fungal mating.

Authors:  R L Metzenberg
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6.  The structure of transposable yeast mating type loci.

Authors:  K A Nasmyth; K Tatchell
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1980-03       Impact factor: 41.582

  6 in total
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3.  Genetic evidence for nonrandom sorting of mitochondria in the basidiomycete Agrocybe aegerita.

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4.  Homologous transformation of the edible basidiomycete Agrocybe aegerita with the URA1 gene: characterization of integrative events and of rearranged free plasmids in transformants.

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7.  The evolution of mating type switching.

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8.  The Pacific Tree-Parasitic Fungus Cyclocybe parasitica Exhibits Monokaryotic Fruiting, Showing Phenotypes Known from Bracket Fungi and from Cyclocybe aegerita.

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9.  DNA loss at the Ceratocystis fimbriata mating locus results in self-sterility.

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10.  Fruiting Body Formation in Volvariella volvacea Can Occur Independently of Its MAT-A-Controlled Bipolar Mating System, Enabling Homothallic and Heterothallic Life Cycles.

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