Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Self-integration – an emerging concept from the fungal mycelium
- 2 Nutrient translocation and electrical signalling in mycelia
- 3 Colony development in nutritionally heterogeneous enviromnents
- 4 Circadian rhythms in filamentous fungi
- 5 Growth, branching and enzyme production by filamentous fungi in submerged culture
- 6 Metabolism and hyphal differentiation in large basidiomycete colonies
- 7 Role of phosphoinositides and inositol phosphates in the regulation of mycelial branching
- 8 Stress responses of fungal colonies towards toxic metals
- 9 Cellularization in Aspergillus nidulans
- 10 Genetic control of polarized growth and branching in filamentous fungi
- 11 Mating and sexual interactions in fungal mycelia
- 12 Genetic stability in fungal mycelia
- 13 Nuclear distribution and gene expression in the secondary mycelium of Schizophyllum commune
- Index
11 - Mating and sexual interactions in fungal mycelia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Self-integration – an emerging concept from the fungal mycelium
- 2 Nutrient translocation and electrical signalling in mycelia
- 3 Colony development in nutritionally heterogeneous enviromnents
- 4 Circadian rhythms in filamentous fungi
- 5 Growth, branching and enzyme production by filamentous fungi in submerged culture
- 6 Metabolism and hyphal differentiation in large basidiomycete colonies
- 7 Role of phosphoinositides and inositol phosphates in the regulation of mycelial branching
- 8 Stress responses of fungal colonies towards toxic metals
- 9 Cellularization in Aspergillus nidulans
- 10 Genetic control of polarized growth and branching in filamentous fungi
- 11 Mating and sexual interactions in fungal mycelia
- 12 Genetic stability in fungal mycelia
- 13 Nuclear distribution and gene expression in the secondary mycelium of Schizophyllum commune
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Sexual reproduction is a major factor aiding adaptability and fitness in organisms throughout the natural world, and the fungi are no exception in exploiting its potential. Fungal mycelia in natural environments, unless they are self-fertile, are faced with the problem of finding a compatible partner. Their major senses are chemical, i.e. taste and smell, so we can imagine each mycelium, in for example the soil, exuding its own specific repertoire of chemicals, to announce its presence to potential mates. These chemicals have to be at least reasonably specific to fungal species, and completely specific to mating type within that species, so that attempts at mating stand a good chance of being successful. Thus potentially there are probably as many different chemicals as there are species. Such specific chemicals can be termed ‘hormones’ used in the context as defined by Raper (1952) for fungi substances produced by the affected plant or by others of the same species … performing indispensable regulatory roles in the sexual process’. An alternative term, increasingly used as a synonym in the fungal literature, is ‘pheromone’ for a chemical acting at a distance (cf., insect sex attractants). The very small number of such compounds that have been identified to date fall into two classes: isoprenoids (derived from mevalonic acid) among the ‘lower fungi’ (a very diverse phylogenetic group). and hydrophobic peptides, mostly isoprenylated, among Ascomycetes and Basidiomycetes. Reviews of various aspects of these fungal hormones/pheromones include those of Raper (1952), Machlis (1972), Gooday (1974), Van den Ende (1984) Gooday & Adams (1993), Gooday (1994) and Duntzse, Betz & Nientiedt (1994).
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- Information
- The Fungal Colony , pp. 261 - 282Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999