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Eukaryot Cell


Title:Transitions in sexuality: recapitulation of an ancestral tri- and tetrapolar mating system in Cryptococcus neoformans
Author(s):Hsueh YP; Fraser JA; Heitman J;
Address:"Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA"
Journal Title:Eukaryot Cell
Year:2008
Volume:20080822
Issue:10
Page Number:1847 - 1855
DOI: 10.1128/EC.00271-08
ISSN/ISBN:1535-9786 (Electronic) 1535-9778 (Print) 1535-9786 (Linking)
Abstract:"Sex is orchestrated by the mating-type locus (MAT) in fungi and by sex chromosomes in plants and animals. In fungi, two patterns of sexuality occur: bipolar with a single, typically biallelic sex determinant that promotes inbreeding, and tetrapolar with two unlinked, often multiallelic sex determinants that restrict inbreeding. Multiallelism in either bipolar or tetrapolar mating systems promotes outcrossing. Cryptococcus neoformans is a pathogenic bipolar yeast with two unusually large MAT alleles (a/alpha) spanning >100 kb, approximately 100-fold larger than many other fungal MAT loci. Based on comparative genomic analysis, this unusual MAT locus is hypothesized to have evolved from an ancestral tetrapolar system. In this model, the unlinked homeodomain (HD) transcription factor and pheromone/receptor tetrapolar loci acquired additional sex-related genes and then fused via chromosomal translocation, forming an intermediate transitional mating system (which we term tripolar), which then underwent recombination and gene conversion to fashion the extant bipolar MAT alleles. To experimentally validate this model, C. neoformans was engineered to have a tetrapolar mating system by relocating the MAT SXI1alpha and SXI2a HD genes to an unlinked genomic locale. Genetic and molecular analyses revealed that this modified organism could complete a tetrapolar sexual cycle. Analysis of progeny generated from bipolar, tripolar, and tetrapolar crosses provides direct experimental evidence that the tripolar state confers decreased fertility and therefore may represent an unstable evolutionary intermediate. These findings illustrate how transitions between outcrossing and inbreeding preference occur by involving sex determinant linkage and collapse from multiallelic to biallelic sex determination, providing insights into both fungal sex evolution and early steps in sex chromosome evolution"
Keywords:"*Crosses, Genetic Cryptococcus neoformans/genetics/*physiology *Evolution, Molecular Fungal Proteins/genetics/metabolism *Genes, Mating Type, Fungal Spores, Fungal/genetics/physiology;Animals;"
Notes:"MedlineHsueh, Yen-Ping Fraser, James A Heitman, Joseph eng R01 AI050113/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/ R01 AI50113/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/ Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural 2008/08/30 Eukaryot Cell. 2008 Oct; 7(10):1847-55. doi: 10.1128/EC.00271-08. Epub 2008 Aug 22"

 
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