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
10 - Genetic control of polarized growth and branching in filamentous fungi
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
One of the most characteristic features of the fungal mycelium is its highly polarized mode of growth. Mycologists have devoted considerable effort towards understanding the basic mechanisms underlying hyphal elongation and branching, and these subjects have been reviewed extensively (Trinci, 1979; Prosser, 1983; Trinci, Wiebe & Robson, 1994; Gow, 1994; Trinci et al., Chapter 5, this volume). One approach which has been employed to investigate these mechanisms is the identification and characterization of mutants defective in hyphal morphogenesis. Such mutants are relatively easy to detect since they typically cause severe alterations in colony morphology. Indeed, a useful benefit of early experiments in the biochemical genetics of Neurospora crassa was the generation and description of a large collection of colonial mutants (Murray dr. Srb, 1962). Although these mutants have been characterized to a limited extent, the nature of the affected genes is in most cases unknown. Recently, with rapid progress being made in understanding cellular morphogenesis in the yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae andSchizosoccharomyces pombe (Snell & Nurse, 1994; Simanis, 1995;Roemer, Vellier&Snyder, 1996), there has been renewed interest in understanding the genetic basis of filamentous growth in fungi. Sincemolecular genetic analyses in the model filamentous fungi Aspergillusnidulans and N. crassa have yielded considerable insight into metabolic control, development, and mitosis (Bennett&Lasure, 1991; Martinelli & Kinghorn, 1994), it is reasonable to presume that this approach will alsocontribute towards achieving a thorough understanding of hyphal morphogenesis.
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- The Fungal Colony , pp. 229 - 260Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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