Lessons on fruiting body morphogenesis from genomes and transcriptomes of Agaricomycetes.

  • L.G. Nagy
  • , P J Vonk
  • , M Künzler
  • , C Földi
  • , M Virágh
  • , R A Ohm
  • , F Hennicke
  • , B Bálint
  • , Á Csernetics
  • , B Hegedüs
  • , Z Hou
  • , X B Liu
  • , S Nan
  • , M Pareek
  • , N Sahu
  • , B Szathmári
  • , T Varga
  • , H Wu
  • , X Yang
  • , Z Merényi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Fruiting bodies (sporocarps, sporophores or basidiomata) of mushroom-forming fungi (Agaricomycetes) are among the most complex structures produced by fungi. Unlike vegetative hyphae, fruiting bodies grow determinately and follow a genetically encoded developmental program that orchestrates their growth, tissue differentiation and sexual sporulation. In spite of more than a century of research, our understanding of the molecular details of fruiting body morphogenesis is still limited and a general synthesis on the genetics of this complex process is lacking. In this paper, we aim at a comprehensive identification of conserved genes related to fruiting body morphogenesis and distil novel functional hypotheses for functionally poorly characterised ones. As a result of this analysis, we report 921 conserved developmentally expressed gene families, only a few dozens of which have previously been reported to be involved in fruiting body development. Based on literature data, conserved expression patterns and functional annotations, we provide hypotheses on the potential role of these gene families in fruiting body development, yielding the most complete description of molecular processes in fruiting body morphogenesis to date. We discuss genes related to the initiation of fruiting, differentiation, growth, cell surface and cell wall, defence, transcriptional regulation as well as signal transduction. Based on these data we derive a general model of fruiting body development, which includes an early, proliferative phase that is mostly concerned with laying out the mushroom body plan (via cell division and differentiation), and a second phase of growth via cell expansion as well as meiotic events and sporulation. Altogether, our discussions cover 1 480 genes of Coprinopsis cinerea, and their orthologs in Agaricus bisporus, Cyclocybe aegerita, Armillaria ostoyae, Auriculariopsis ampla, Laccaria bicolor, Lentinula edodes, Lentinus tigrinus, Mycena kentingensis, Phanerochaete chrysosporium, Pleurotus ostreatus, and Schizophyllum commune, providing functional hypotheses for ∼10 % of genes in the genomes of these species. Although experimental evidence for the role of these genes will need to be established in the future, our data provide a roadmap for guiding functional analyses of fruiting related genes in the Agaricomycetes. We anticipate that the gene compendium presented here, combined with developments in functional genomics approaches will contribute to uncovering the genetic bases of one of the most spectacular multicellular developmental processes in fungi.

Original languageEnglish
Article number85
Pages (from-to)1-85
Number of pages85
JournalStudies in Mycology
Volume104
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute.

Funding

This work was supported by the European Research Council (grant no. 758161 to L.G.N.), the “Momentum” program of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (contract No. LP2019-13/2019 to L.G.N.), the Hungarian National Research, Development, and Innovation Office (contract No. GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00052), the Szeged Scientists Academy under the sponsorship of the Hungarian Ministry of Innovation and Technology (FEIF/646-4/2021-ITM_SZERZ, to B.Sz., A. Cs. And L.G.N.) and with the professional support of the Doctoral Student Scholarship Program of the Co-operative Doctoral Program of the Ministry of Innovation and Technology financed from the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund (KDP-17-4/PALY-2021, to Cs.F.). T.V. was supported by the National Talent Programme (NTP-NFTÖ-21-B-0074) of the Hungarian Government. FH gratefully acknowledges funding from the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) under grant HE 7849/3-1.

FundersFunder number
Hungarian Ministry of Innovation and TechnologyFEIF/646-4/2021-ITM_SZERZ
National Talent ProgrammeNTP-NFTÖ-21-B-0074
European Research Council758161
Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftHE 7849/3-1
Magyar Tudományos AkadémiaLP2019-13/2019
Nemzeti Kutatási Fejlesztési és Innovációs HivatalGINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00052
Nemzeti Kutatási, Fejlesztési és Innovaciós AlapKDP-17-4/PALY-2021
Magyarország Kormánya

    Keywords

    • Cell wall remodelling
    • Comparative genomics
    • Development
    • Fruiting body morphogenesis
    • Functional annotation
    • Mushroom
    • Transcriptome

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