Literature DB >> 26497018

Spore behaviors reveal a category of mating-competent infertile heterokaryons in the offspring of the medicinal fungus Agaricus subrufescens.

Manuela Rocha de Brito1,2, Marie Foulongne-Oriol1, Magalie Moinard1, Eustáquio Souza Dias2, Jean-Michel Savoie1, Philippe Callac3.   

Abstract

Strain breeding is much less advanced in the edible and medicinal species Agaricus subrufescens than in Agaricus bisporus, the button mushroom. Both species have a unifactorial system of sexual incompatibility, a mating type locus tightly linked to a centromere, and basidia producing both homokaryotic (n) and heterokaryotic (n + n) spores. In A. bisporus, breeding is mainly based on direct selection among the heterokaryotic offspring and on hybridization between homokaryotic offspring. The parental heterozygosity is highly maintained in the heterokaryotic offspring due to suppression of recombination and preferential pairing in the spores of nuclei, each one per second meiotic divisions; such "non-sister nuclei" heterokaryons are fertile. In A. subrufescens, recent studies revealed that recombination is not suppressed and that nuclei from the same second meiotic division can also be paired in a spore that give rise to a "sister nuclei" heterokaryon in which the nuclei bear the same mating type allele. The objective of the present work was to investigate the potential function of the different categories of spores in A. subrufescens and their possible use in a genetic breeding program. Using eight co-dominant molecular markers, we found that half of the offspring of the A. subrufescens strain WC837 were heterokaryotic, one quarter of them being sister nuclei heterokaryons. These heterokaryons were infertile and behaved like homokaryons, being even able to cross between each other. In contrast, non-sister nuclei heterokaryons could fruit but inconsistently due to inbreeding depression. Potential roles of these two categories of heterokaryons in nature and consequences for strain breeding are discussed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Breeding program; Buller phenomenon; Life cycle; Mushroom; Pseudohomothallism

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Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26497018     DOI: 10.1007/s00253-015-7070-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Microbiol Biotechnol        ISSN: 0175-7598            Impact factor:   4.813


  3 in total

1.  The Genetic Linkage Map of the Medicinal Mushroom Agaricus subrufescens Reveals Highly Conserved Macrosynteny with the Congeneric Species Agaricus bisporus.

Authors:  Marie Foulongne-Oriol; Manuela Rocha de Brito; Delphine Cabannes; Aurélien Clément; Cathy Spataro; Magalie Moinard; Eustáquio Souza Dias; Philippe Callac; Jean-Michel Savoie
Journal:  G3 (Bethesda)       Date:  2016-05-03       Impact factor: 3.154

2.  Agaricus macrochlamys, a New Species from the (Sub)tropical Cloud Forests of North America and the Caribbean, and Agaricus fiardii, a New Synonym of Agaricus subrufescens.

Authors:  Rosario Medel-Ortiz; Roberto Garibay-Orijel; Andrés Argüelles-Moyao; Gerardo Mata; Richard W Kerrigan; Alan E Bessette; József Geml; Claudio Angelini; Luis A Parra; Jie Chen
Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-24

3.  Genetic Analyses of the Internal Transcribed Spacer Sequences Suggest Introgression and Duplication in the Medicinal Mushroom Agaricus subrufescens.

Authors:  Jie Chen; Magalie Moinard; Jianping Xu; Shouxian Wang; Marie Foulongne-Oriol; Ruilin Zhao; Kevin D Hyde; Philippe Callac
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-05-26       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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