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Interruption of an MSH4 homolog blocks meiosis in metaphase I and eliminates spore formation in Pleurotus ostreatus

Pleurotus ostreatus, one of the most widely cultivated edible mushrooms, produces high numbers of spores causing severe respiratory health problems for people, clogging of filters and spoilage of produce. A non-sporulating commercial variety (SPOPPO) has been successfully introduced into the market...

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Autores principales: Lavrijssen, Brian, Baars, Johan P., Lugones, Luis G., Scholtmeijer, Karin, Sedaghat Telgerd, Narges, Sonnenberg, Anton S. M., van Peer, Arend F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7641404/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33147286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241749
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author Lavrijssen, Brian
Baars, Johan P.
Lugones, Luis G.
Scholtmeijer, Karin
Sedaghat Telgerd, Narges
Sonnenberg, Anton S. M.
van Peer, Arend F.
author_facet Lavrijssen, Brian
Baars, Johan P.
Lugones, Luis G.
Scholtmeijer, Karin
Sedaghat Telgerd, Narges
Sonnenberg, Anton S. M.
van Peer, Arend F.
author_sort Lavrijssen, Brian
collection PubMed
description Pleurotus ostreatus, one of the most widely cultivated edible mushrooms, produces high numbers of spores causing severe respiratory health problems for people, clogging of filters and spoilage of produce. A non-sporulating commercial variety (SPOPPO) has been successfully introduced into the market in 2006. This variety was generated by introgression breeding of a natural mutation into a commercial variety. Our cytological studies revealed that meiosis in the natural and derived sporeless strains was blocked in metaphase I, apparently resulting in a loss of spore formation. The gene(s) underlying this phenotype were mapped to an 80 kb region strongly linked to sporelessness and identified by transformation of wild type genes of this region into a sporeless strain. Sporulation was restored by re-introduction of the DNA sequence encoding the P. ostreatus meiotic recombination gene MSH4 homolog (poMSH4). Subsequent molecular analysis showed that poMSH4 in the sporeless P. ostreatus was interrupted by a DNA fragment containing a region encoding a CxC5/CxC6 cysteine cluster associated with Copia-type retrotransposons. The block of meiosis in metaphase I by a poMSH4 null mutant suggests that this protein plays an essential role in both Class I and II crossovers in mushrooms, similar to animals (mice), but unlike in plants. MSH4 was previously shown to be a target for breeding of sporeless varieties in P. pulmonarius, and the null mutant of the MSH4 homolog of S. commune (scMSH4) confers an extremely low level of spore formation. We propose that MSH4 homologs are likely to be a breeding target for sporeless strains both within Pleurotus sp. and in other Agaricales.
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spelling pubmed-76414042020-11-16 Interruption of an MSH4 homolog blocks meiosis in metaphase I and eliminates spore formation in Pleurotus ostreatus Lavrijssen, Brian Baars, Johan P. Lugones, Luis G. Scholtmeijer, Karin Sedaghat Telgerd, Narges Sonnenberg, Anton S. M. van Peer, Arend F. PLoS One Research Article Pleurotus ostreatus, one of the most widely cultivated edible mushrooms, produces high numbers of spores causing severe respiratory health problems for people, clogging of filters and spoilage of produce. A non-sporulating commercial variety (SPOPPO) has been successfully introduced into the market in 2006. This variety was generated by introgression breeding of a natural mutation into a commercial variety. Our cytological studies revealed that meiosis in the natural and derived sporeless strains was blocked in metaphase I, apparently resulting in a loss of spore formation. The gene(s) underlying this phenotype were mapped to an 80 kb region strongly linked to sporelessness and identified by transformation of wild type genes of this region into a sporeless strain. Sporulation was restored by re-introduction of the DNA sequence encoding the P. ostreatus meiotic recombination gene MSH4 homolog (poMSH4). Subsequent molecular analysis showed that poMSH4 in the sporeless P. ostreatus was interrupted by a DNA fragment containing a region encoding a CxC5/CxC6 cysteine cluster associated with Copia-type retrotransposons. The block of meiosis in metaphase I by a poMSH4 null mutant suggests that this protein plays an essential role in both Class I and II crossovers in mushrooms, similar to animals (mice), but unlike in plants. MSH4 was previously shown to be a target for breeding of sporeless varieties in P. pulmonarius, and the null mutant of the MSH4 homolog of S. commune (scMSH4) confers an extremely low level of spore formation. We propose that MSH4 homologs are likely to be a breeding target for sporeless strains both within Pleurotus sp. and in other Agaricales. Public Library of Science 2020-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7641404/ /pubmed/33147286 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241749 Text en © 2020 Lavrijssen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lavrijssen, Brian
Baars, Johan P.
Lugones, Luis G.
Scholtmeijer, Karin
Sedaghat Telgerd, Narges
Sonnenberg, Anton S. M.
van Peer, Arend F.
Interruption of an MSH4 homolog blocks meiosis in metaphase I and eliminates spore formation in Pleurotus ostreatus
title Interruption of an MSH4 homolog blocks meiosis in metaphase I and eliminates spore formation in Pleurotus ostreatus
title_full Interruption of an MSH4 homolog blocks meiosis in metaphase I and eliminates spore formation in Pleurotus ostreatus
title_fullStr Interruption of an MSH4 homolog blocks meiosis in metaphase I and eliminates spore formation in Pleurotus ostreatus
title_full_unstemmed Interruption of an MSH4 homolog blocks meiosis in metaphase I and eliminates spore formation in Pleurotus ostreatus
title_short Interruption of an MSH4 homolog blocks meiosis in metaphase I and eliminates spore formation in Pleurotus ostreatus
title_sort interruption of an msh4 homolog blocks meiosis in metaphase i and eliminates spore formation in pleurotus ostreatus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7641404/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33147286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241749
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