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Applied and Environmental Microbiology
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Mycology

Evidence for Outcrossing via the Buller Phenomenon in a Substrate Simultaneously Inoculated with Spores and Mycelium of Agaricus bisporus

Philippe Callac, Cathy Spataro, Aurélie Caille, Micheline Imbernon
Philippe Callac
Mycologie et Sécurité des Aliments, INRA, B.P. 81, F-33883 Villenave d'Ornon cedex, France
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  • For correspondence: callac@bordeaux.inra.fr
Cathy Spataro
Mycologie et Sécurité des Aliments, INRA, B.P. 81, F-33883 Villenave d'Ornon cedex, France
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Aurélie Caille
Mycologie et Sécurité des Aliments, INRA, B.P. 81, F-33883 Villenave d'Ornon cedex, France
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Micheline Imbernon
Mycologie et Sécurité des Aliments, INRA, B.P. 81, F-33883 Villenave d'Ornon cedex, France
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DOI: 10.1128/AEM.72.4.2366-2372.2006
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ABSTRACT

In Agaricus bisporus, traditional cultivars and most of the wild populations belong to A. bisporus var. bisporus, which has a predominantly pseudohomothallic life cycle in which most meiospores are heterokaryons (n + n). A lower proportion of homokaryotic (n) meiospores, which typify the heterothallic life cycle, also are produced. In wild populations, pseudohomothallism was thought previously to play a major role, but recent analyses have found that significant outcrossing also may occur. We inoculated a standard substrate for A. bisporus cultivation simultaneously with homokaryotic mycelium from one parent and spores from a second parent. Culture trays produced numerous sporocarps that could theoretically have resulted from five different reproductive modes (pseudohomothallism, selfing or outcrossing via heterothallism, and selfing or outcrossing via the Buller phenomenon [i.e., between a homokaryon and a heterokaryon]). Most or all of the sporocarps resulted from outcrossing between the inoculated homokaryon and the inoculated heterokaryotic spores (or mycelia that grew from them). These data broaden our understanding of population dynamics under field conditions and provide an outcrossing method that could be used in commercial breeding programs.

  • Copyright © 2006 American Society for Microbiology
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Evidence for Outcrossing via the Buller Phenomenon in a Substrate Simultaneously Inoculated with Spores and Mycelium of Agaricus bisporus
Philippe Callac, Cathy Spataro, Aurélie Caille, Micheline Imbernon
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Apr 2006, 72 (4) 2366-2372; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.72.4.2366-2372.2006

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Evidence for Outcrossing via the Buller Phenomenon in a Substrate Simultaneously Inoculated with Spores and Mycelium of Agaricus bisporus
Philippe Callac, Cathy Spataro, Aurélie Caille, Micheline Imbernon
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Apr 2006, 72 (4) 2366-2372; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.72.4.2366-2372.2006
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KEYWORDS

Agaricus
Crosses, Genetic
Mycelium
Spores, Fungal

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