| Literature DB >> 31314937 |
Hao Tan1,2, Annegret Kohler3, Renyun Miao1,2, Tianhai Liu1,2, Qiang Zhang1,2, Bo Zhang1,2, Lin Jiang1,2, Yong Wang1,2, Liyuan Xie1,2, Jie Tang1,2, Xiaolin Li1,2, Lixu Liu1,2, Igor V Grigoriev4,5, Chris Daum4,5, Kurt LaButti4,5, Anna Lipzen4,5, Alan Kuo4,5, Emmanuelle Morin3, Elodie Drula6,7,8, Bernard Henrissat6,7,8, Bo Wang1,2, Zhongqian Huang1,2, Bingcheng Gan1,2, Weihong Peng1,2, Francis M Martin3.
Abstract
The black morel (Morchella importuna Kuo, O'Donnell and Volk) was once an uncultivable wild mushroom, until the development of exogenous nutrient bag (ENB), making its agricultural production quite feasible and stable. To date, how the nutritional acquisition of the morel mycelium is fulfilled to trigger its fruiting remains unknown. To investigate the mechanisms involved in ENB decomposition, the genome of a cultivable morel strain (M. importuna SCYDJ1-A1) was sequenced and the genes coding for the decay apparatus were identified. Expression of the encoded carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes) was then analyzed by metatranscriptomics and metaproteomics in combination with biochemical assays. The results show that a diverse set of hydrolytic and redox CAZymes secreted by the morel mycelium is the main force driving the substrate decomposition. Plant polysaccharides such as starch and cellulose present in ENB substrate (wheat grains plus rice husks) were rapidly degraded, whereas triglycerides were accumulated initially and consumed later. ENB decomposition led to a rapid increase in the organic carbon content in the surface soil of the mushroom bed, which was thereafter consumed during morel fruiting. In contrast to the high carbon consumption, no significant acquisition of nitrogen was observed. Our findings contribute to an increasingly detailed portrait of molecular features triggering morel fruiting.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31314937 DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.14741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Microbiol ISSN: 1462-2912 Impact factor: 5.491