Ancient Trans-specific Polymorphism at Pheromone Receptor Genes in Basidiomycetes
- 1 January 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 181 (1) , 209-223
- https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.108.093708
Abstract
In the majority of sexual organisms, reproduction occurs almost exclusively through the combination of distinct and alternate forms, called sexes or mating types. In some fungi, there can be dozens to hundreds of alternate alleles that determine compatible mating types. Such extensive polymorphism is expected to be maintained by balancing selection, and in extreme cases may give rise to trans-specific polymorphism. Here, we analyzed sequences of two pheromone receptors in the Microbotryum fungal species complex (Basidiomycota), which has only two alternate mating types. Several lines of evidence strongly suggest that the pheromone receptors are two allelic sequences acting to determine the alternate A1 and A2 mating types required for mating in Microbotryum. Phylogenetic trees of pheromone receptors in the Microbotryum species complex indicated a trans-specific polymorphism: the Microbotryum sequences from a given mating type were all more similar to the pheromone receptors of distantly related classes of fungi than to the alternate pheromone receptor in the Microbotryum species. A phylogenetic tree built using other known pheromone receptors from basidiomycetes showed that trans-specific polymorphism is widespread. The pheromone receptor alleles from Microbotryum appeared as the oldest, being at least 370 million years old. This represents the oldest known trans-specific polymorphism known in any organism so far, which may be due to the existence of sex chromosomes, obligate sexuality, mitochondrial inheritance linked to the mating type, and a highly selfing mating system in Microbotryum.Keywords
This publication has 86 references indexed in Scilit:
- Identification of Mating Type Genes in the Bipolar Basidiomycetous Yeast Rhodosporidium toruloides : First Insight into the MAT Locus Structure of the SporidiobolalesEukaryotic Cell, 2008
- Mating System of the Anther Smut Fungus Microbotryum violaceum : Selfing under HeterothallismEukaryotic Cell, 2008
- The Mating-Type Chromosome in the Filamentous Ascomycete Neurospora tetrasperma Represents a Model for Early Evolution of Sex ChromosomesPLoS Genetics, 2008
- Expressed sequences tags of the anther smut fungus, Microbotryum violaceum, identify mating and pathogenicity genesBMC Genomics, 2007
- Evolution of the complementary sex-determination gene of honey bees: Balancing selection and trans-species polymorphismsGenome Research, 2006
- A Gradual Process of Recombination Restriction in the Evolutionary History of the Sex Chromosomes in Dioecious PlantsPLoS Biology, 2004
- Convergent Evolution of Chromosomal Sex-Determining Regions in the Animal and Fungal KingdomsPLoS Biology, 2004
- Sex‐Ratio Bias in Populations of the Phytopathogenic FungusMicrobotryum violaceumfrom Several Host SpeciesInternational Journal of Plant Sciences, 2003
- Multiple Comparisons of Log-Likelihoods with Applications to Phylogenetic InferenceMolecular Biology and Evolution, 1999
- The rapid generation of mutation data matrices from protein sequencesBioinformatics, 1992