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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 10 1995, 3609-3616, Vol 61, No. 10
PY de la Bastide, BR Kropp and Y Piche
An in vitro study investigated mechanisms for the development of
genetically variable mycorrhizal mycelia for Laccaria bicolor. Seedlings of
jack pine (Pinus banksiana) grown nonaseptically in an autoclaved soil
substrate were given different L. bicolor inoculum treatments. These
included (i) a dikaryotic mycelium genotype (D); (ii) D and basidiospores
collected from one group of five sporophores (T1); (iii) D and
basidiospores collected from 10 sporophores, two from each of five
different groups (T5); (iv) T1 alone; (v) T5 alone; and (vi) a
noninoculated control. Dikaryotic mycelial inoculum was provided at the
time of sowing, while basidiospore inoculum was added at 10 weeks after
seed germination. Sporophore formation was induced after 20 weeks of
growth, and dikaryotic cultures were isolated from their tissue. Seedlings
were harvested, and growth and mycorrhization were assessed. Levels of both
were generally lower for T1-treated seedlings, compared with seedlings
receiving D, while levels for T5-treated seedlings were intermediate.
Sporophore genotype variability was assessed for inoculum treatments by
using the isoenzymatic marker leucine aminopeptidase. The greatest genetic
variability was seen with the basidiospore treatments T1 and T5, with up to
four leucine aminopeptidase patterns per seedling. The mixed treatments D
plus T1 and D plus T5 produced most frequently, but not exclusively, the
inoculated dikaryon genotype. After isoenzyme results were assessed,
variable sporophore isolates of mixed treatments were analyzed with
randomly amplified polymorphic DNA and PCR mitochondrial DNA markers to
determine if they were formed by dikaryon-monokaryon crosses between the
inoculated dikaryon and monosporous mycelia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250
WORDS)
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Mechanisms for the development of genetically variable mycorrhizal mycelia in the ectomycorrhizal fungus Laccaria bicolor
Departement des Sciences Forestieres, Universite Laval, Cite universitaire, Quebec, Canada.
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