CONTACT  |  SITE MAP  |  ABOUT US   
Ask an account
You are here : Home / Home URGI / Species / Microbotryum / Publications / Linkage of

Publications

International,  ACL (papers with reading comittee)

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1994 Jul 19;91(15):7085-9.

19 Jul 1994   Linkage of mating-type loci distinguishes bipolar from tetrapolar mating in basidiomycetous smut fungi

Bakkeren G, Kronstad JW

Sexual compatibility requires self vs. non-self recognition. Genetically, two compatibility or mating-type systems govern recognition in heterothallic basidiomycete fungi such as the edible and woodrotting mushrooms and the economically important rust and smut phytopathogens. A bipolar system is defined by a single genetic locus (MAT) that can have two or multiple alleles. A tetrapolar system has two loci, each with two or more specificities. We have employed two species from the genus Ustilago (smut fungi) to discover a molecular explanation for the genetic difference in mating systems. Ustilago maydis, a tetrapolar species, has two genetically unlinked loci that encode the distinct mating functions of cell fusion (a locus) and subsequent sexual development and pathogenicity (b locus). We have recently described a b locus in a bipolar species, Ustilago hordei, wherein the existence of an a locus has been suspected, but not demonstrated. We report here the cloning of an allele of the a locus (a1) from U. hordei and the discovery that physical linkage of the a and b loci in this bipolar fungus accounts for the distinct mating system. Linkage establishes a large complex MAT locus in U. hordei; this locus appears to be in a region suppressed for recombination.


Keywords: mating-type, fungi
Update: 09 May 2011
Creation date: 05 May 2010