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

Authors :
Erica Mondo
Robert J. Doiron
Patrick Cabral
Michele Flannery
Lindsay Wiswell
Amy L. Shafrir
Diane Cope Peabody
Kathleen Salisbury
Amber C. Churchill
Carrie Peabody
Elisha Allan-Perkins
Darius Haghighat
Thomas Hernon
Daniel Lukason
Lauren Presti
Robert B. Peabody
Juan Carlos Ramirez-Tapia
Rachel G. Hirst
Kathryn Fallavollita
Lynes Torres
Benjamin Seidel
Magdalena James-Pederson
Sarah Wilson
Maura Geens Tyrrell
Kelsey McKenna-Hoffman
Heather Bickford
Kaitlin Daly
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2020), Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

Although cells of mushroom-producing fungi typically contain paired haploid nuclei (n + n), most Armillaria gallica vegetative cells are uninucleate. As vegetative nuclei are produced by fusions of paired haploid nuclei, they are thought to be diploid (2n). Here we report finding haploid vegetative nuclei in A. gallica at multiple sites in southeastern Massachusetts, USA. Sequencing multiple clones of a single-copy gene isolated from single hyphal filaments revealed nuclear heterogeneity both among and within hyphae. Cytoplasmic bridges connected hyphae in field-collected and cultured samples, and we propose nuclear migration through bridges maintains this nuclear heterogeneity. Growth studies demonstrate among- and within-hypha phenotypic variation for growth in response to gallic acid, a plant-produced antifungal compound. The existence of both genetic and phenotypic variation within vegetative hyphae suggests that fungal individuals have the potential to evolve within a single generation in response to environmental variation over time and space.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....154d34a029798f8f4004ef66fb218523