Search About RLL About Mattick About Supplement Add to Supplement PDF file providers Help

Full record view

Joneson, S./ D. Armaleo/ F. Lutzoni 2011: Fungal and algal gene expression in early developmental stages of lichen-symbiosis. - Mycologia 103(2): 291-306. [RLL List # 224 / Rec.# 33067]
Keywords: Asterochloris sp., Cladonia grayi, lichen, plant-fungal interactions, symbiosis
Abstract: How plants and microbes recognize each other and interact to form long-lasting relationships remains one of the central questions in cellular communication. The symbiosis between the filamentous fungus Cladonia grayi and the single-celled green alga Asterochloris sp. was used to determine fungal and algal genes upregulated in vitro in early lichen development. cDNA libraries of upregulated genes were created with suppression subtractive hybridization in the first two stages of lichen development. Quantitative PCR subsequently was used to verify the expression level of 41 and 33 candidate fungal and algal genes respectively. Induced fungal genes showed significant matches to genes putatively encoding proteins involved in self and non-self recognition, lipid metabolism, and negative regulation of glucose repressible genes, as well as to a putative D-arabitol reductase and two dioxygenases. Upregulated algal genes included a chitinase-like protein, an amino acid metabolism protein, a dynein-related protein and a protein arginine methyltransferase. These results also provided the first evidence that extracellular communication without cellular contact can occur between lichen symbionts. Many genes showing slight variation in expression appear to direct the development of the lichen symbiosis. The results of this study highlight future avenues of investigation into the molecular biology of lichen symbiosis.
– doi:10.3852/10-064

URL: http://www.mycologia.org/cgi/content/abstract/103/2/291/

[Email correction]


The services below has been taken off the server due to many inappropiate uploads. Please contact Einar.Timdal@nhm.uio.no directly for uploading files or links

Upload PDF file to the RLL web site

If you have a PDF file of this RLL/Mattic record, and there are no copyright problems involved, you may upload the file to the RLL/Mattick site. The PDF file will be automatically linked to the paper, and available for download by everyone. Only one PDF file can be linked to a paper, any previous link will be lost.

PDF file::
NB! Legal characters: a-z, A-Z, 0-9, hyphen, underscore, dot (i.e. no diacritics, ampersand, space, etc.).

  


Upload URL to PDF file or web site

Alternatively, you can link this RLL/Mattick record to a PDF file or web page placed somewhere else on the web. Again, only a single link can exist for each record; any previous link will be lost.

Copy and paste the URL you wish to link to this record: