Comparative Study of Nonautolytic Mutant and Wild-Type Strains of <i>Coprinopsis cinerea</i> Supports an Important Role of Glucanases in Fruiting Body Autolysis

Abstract

Autolysis of <i>Coprinopsis cinerea</i> fruiting bodies affects its commercial value. In this study, a mutant of <i>C. cinerea</i> that exhibits pileus expansion without pileus autolysis was obtained using ultraviolet mutagenesis. This suggests that pileus expansion and pileus autolysis involve different enzymes or proteins. Among the detected hydrolytic enzymes, only β-1,3-glucanase activity increased with expansion and autolysis of pilei in the wild-type strain, but the increase was abolished in the mutant. This suggests that β-1,3-glucanases plays a major role in the autolysis. Although there are 43 possible β-1,3-glucoside hydrolases genes, only 4 known genes, which have products that are thought to act synergistically to degrade the β-1,3-glucan backbone of cell walls during fruiting body autolysis, and an unreported gene were upregulated during pileus expansion and autolysis in the wild-type stain but were suppressed in the mutant. This suggests that expression of these β-1,3-glucanases is potentially controlled by a single regulatory mechanism

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions