Research Keyword: C2H2 zinc finger genes

Evolutionary Dynamics and Functional Bifurcation of the C2H2 Gene Family in Basidiomycota

Researchers analyzed genetic instructions for zinc finger proteins across 30 species of basidiomycete fungi (including mushrooms and fungal pathogens). They found that different fungal species evolved different versions of these proteins based on their lifestyle: fungi that break down wood kept complex gene versions with lots of regulatory switches, while parasitic fungi streamlined their genes for efficiency. By studying when and where these genes are active during mushroom development, scientists discovered they orchestrate different stages from cold adaptation to mature fruiting body formation, revealing how fungi adapt to diverse ecological roles.

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Evolutionary Dynamics and Functional Bifurcation of the C2H2 Gene Family in Basidiomycota

Researchers studied C2H2 genes, which are master regulators controlling important processes in fungal cells, across 30 different mushroom and fungal species. They found that these genes evolved differently depending on whether fungi were decomposers (saprotrophs) or pathogens, with decomposers maintaining more complex gene structures. During mushroom development in Sarcomyxa edulis, different C2H2 genes became active at different stages, controlling temperature adaptation, fruiting body formation, and other developmental processes.

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