Data di Pubblicazione:
2018
Abstract:
Tuberaceae is one of the most diverse lineages of symbiotic truffle-forming fungi. To understand the molecular underpinning
of the ectomycorrhizal
truffle
lifestyle,
we
compared
the genomes
of Piedmont
white
truffle
(Tuber
magnatum),
Périgord
black
truffle
(Tuber
melanosporum),
Burgundy truffle
(Tuber
aestivum),
pig truffle
(Choiromyces
venosus)
and desert
truffle
(Terfezia
boudieri)
to
saprotrophic
Pezizomycetes.
Reconstructed
gene
duplication/loss
histories
along a time-calibrated
phylogeny
of Ascomycetes
revealed
that Tuberaceae-specific
traits
may
be related
to
a higher gene
diversification
rate.
Genomic
features
in Tuber
species appear to
be very
similar,
with high transposon
content,
few
genes
coding
lignocellulosedegrading
enzymes, a substantial
set of lineage-specific
fruiting-body-upregulated
genes
and high expression
of genes
involved
in
volatile
organic
compound
metabolism.
Developmental
and
metabolic
pathways
expressed
in
ectomycorrhizae
and
fruiting
bodies of T.
magnatum
and T.
melanosporum
are
unexpectedly
very
similar,
owing
to
the fact
that they
diverged
~100
Ma.
Volatile
organic
compounds
from
pungent
truffle
odours
are
not the products
of Tuber-specific
gene
innovations,
but rely
on
the differential
expression
of an existing
gene
repertoire.
These
genomic
resources
will help to
address
fundamental questions
in the evolution
of the truffle
lifestyle
and the ecology
of fungi that have
been praised
as food
delicacies for
centuries.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
no key words
Elenco autori:
Mello, Antonietta; Balestrini, RAFFAELLA MARIA; Paolocci, Francesco; Rubini, Andrea; Belfiori, Beatrice; Riccioni, Claudia
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