Literature DB >> 16457347

Haploid vegetative mycelia of Armillaria gallica show among-cell-line variation for growth and phenotypic plasticity.

Robert B Peabody1, Diane Cope Peabody, Maura Geens Tyrrell, Emily Edenburn-MacQueen, Richard P Howdy, Kevin M Semelrath.   

Abstract

Vegetative mycelial cells of Armillaria are expected to have diploid nuclei. Cells from a single mycelium therefore would not be expected to differ from one another for ecologically relevant quantitative traits. We isolated two sets of basidiome cell lines (from spores and stipe cells) and one set of vegetative cell lines (from an attached rhizomorph) from a single contiguous Armillaria gallica mycelium. We isolated a second set of vegetative cell lines from the soil 20 cm from the above basidiome-rhizomorph complex. In all four sets of cell lines in situ DAPI-DNA measurements showed cells are haploid and quantitative-trait analyses of cell lines grown at different water potentials revealed high levels of among-cell-line genetic variation for both growth and phenotypic plasticity. Haploidy and the existence of ecologically relevant genetic variation within vegetative individuals are unexpected and mean that a process similar to evolutionary adaptation could take place within the soma of a genetic individual. We believe this is a key to understanding how large A. gallica mycelia survive exposure to variation in ecological conditions during lives that potentially span several tree (host) generations.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16457347     DOI: 10.3852/mycologia.97.4.777

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mycologia        ISSN: 0027-5514            Impact factor:   2.696


  4 in total

1.  A termite symbiotic mushroom maximizing sexual activity at growing tips of vegetative hyphae.

Authors:  Huei-Mei Hsieh; Mei-Chu Chung; Pao-Yang Chen; Fei-Man Hsu; Wen-Wei Liao; Ai-Ning Sung; Chun-Ru Lin; Chung-Ju Rachel Wang; Yu-Hsin Kao; Mei-Jane Fang; Chi-Yung Lai; Chieh-Chen Huang; Jyh-Ching Chou; Wen-Neng Chou; Bill Chia-Han Chang; Yu-Ming Ju
Journal:  Bot Stud       Date:  2017-09-19       Impact factor: 2.787

2.  Mosaic fungal individuals have the potential to evolve within a single generation.

Authors:  Maura G Tyrrell; Diane C Peabody; Robert B Peabody; Magdalena James-Pederson; Rachel G Hirst; Elisha Allan-Perkins; Heather Bickford; Amy Shafrir; Robert J Doiron; Amber C Churchill; Juan Carlos Ramirez-Tapia; Benjamin Seidel; Lynes Torres; Kathryn Fallavollita; Thomas Hernon; Lindsay Wiswell; Sarah Wilson; Erica Mondo; Kathleen Salisbury; Carrie Peabody; Patrick Cabral; Lauren Presti; Kelsey McKenna-Hoffman; Michele Flannery; Kaitlin Daly; Darius Haghighat; Daniel Lukason
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-10-19       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 3.  Epidemiology, Biotic Interactions and Biological Control of Armillarioids in the Northern Hemisphere.

Authors:  Orsolya Kedves; Danish Shahab; Simang Champramary; Liqiong Chen; Boris Indic; Bettina Bóka; Viktor Dávid Nagy; Csaba Vágvölgyi; László Kredics; György Sipos
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2021-01-16

4.  Somatic transposition and meiotically driven elimination of an active helitron family in Pleurotus ostreatus.

Authors:  Alessandra Borgognone; Raúl Castanera; Elaia Muguerza; Antonio G Pisabarro; Lucía Ramírez
Journal:  DNA Res       Date:  2017-04-01       Impact factor: 4.458

  4 in total

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