Journal article

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

HM Hsieh, MC Chung, PY Chen, FM Hsu, WW Liao, AN Sung, CR Lin, CJR Wang, YH Kao, MJ Fang, CY Lai, CC Huang, JC Chou, WN Chou, BCH Chang, YM Ju

Botanical Studies | Published : 2017

Abstract

Background: Termitomyces mushrooms are mutualistically associated with fungus-growing termites, which are widely considered to cultivate a monogenotypic Termitomyces symbiont within a colony. Termitomyces cultures isolated directly from termite colonies are heterokaryotic, likely through mating between compatible homokaryons. Results: After pairing homokaryons carrying different haplotypes at marker gene loci MIP and RCB from a Termitomyces fruiting body associated with Odontotermes formosanus, we observed nuclear fusion and division, which greatly resembled meiosis, during each hyphal cell division and conidial formation in the resulting heterokaryons. Surprisingly, nuclei in homokaryons al..

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University of Melbourne Researchers