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Cited 16 time in webofscience Cited 22 time in scopus
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Diversity of A mating type in Lentinula edodes and mating type preference in the cultivated strains

Authors
Ha, ByeongsukKim, SinilKim, MinseekMoon, Yoon JungSong, YelinRyu, Jae-SanRyu, HojinRo, Hyeon-Su
Issue Date
Jun-2018
Publisher
MICROBIOLOGICAL SOCIETY KOREA
Keywords
diversity; lentinula; mating; nucleus; preference
Citation
JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY, v.56, no.6, pp 416 - 425
Pages
10
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume
56
Number
6
Start Page
416
End Page
425
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/11594
DOI
10.1007/s12275-018-8030-6
ISSN
1225-8873
1976-3794
Abstract
Diversity of A mating type in Lentinula edodes has been assessed by analysis of A mating loci in 127 strains collected from East Asia. It was discovered that hypervariable sequence region with an approximate length of 1 kb in the A mating locus, spanning 5' region of HD2-intergenic region-5' region of HD1, could represent individual A mating type as evidenced by comprehensive mating analysis. The sequence analysis revealed 27 A mating type alleles from 96 cultivated strains and 48 alleles from 31 wild strains. Twelve of them commonly appeared, leaving 63 unique A mating type alleles. It was also revealed that only A few A mating type alleles such as A1, A4, A5, and A7 were prevalent in the cultivated strains, accounting for 62.5% of all A mating types. This implies preferred selection of certain A mating types in the process of strain development and suggests potential role of A mating genes in the expression of genes governing mushroom quality. Dominant expression of an A mating gene HD1 was observed from A1 mating locus, the most prevalent A allele, in A1-containing dikaryons. However, connections between HD1 expression and A1 preference in the cultivated strains remain to be verified. The A mating type was highly diverse in the wild strains. Thirty-six unique A alleles were discovered from relatively small and confined area of mountainous region in Korean peninsula. The number will further increase because no A allele has been recurrently observed in the wild strains and thus newly discovered strain will have good chances to contain new A allele. The high diversity in small area also suggests that the A mating locus has evolved rapidly and thus its diversity will further increase.
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