Research Keyword: genetic divergence

Evidence for the Existence of Mating Subtypes Within the Schizophyllum commune: Mating Behavior and Genetic Divergence

Researchers discovered that a common fungus called Schizophyllum commune has hidden genetic subtypes within its mating types that weren’t recognized before. By studying 149 fungal strains and analyzing their mating behavior, they found that fungi with the same mating type could still behave differently when reproducing. Specific genes controlling pheromone chemicals were identified as responsible for these differences, revealing more complexity in fungal reproduction than previously understood.

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Genetic differentiation in the MAT-proximal region is not sufficient for suppressing recombination in Podospora anserina

Scientists studied why certain regions of fungal chromosomes don’t allow genetic recombination like normal chromosomes do. By creating a mutant fungus where a previously different genetic region became identical, they found that genetic differences alone don’t explain why recombination stops. Instead, they discovered that other biological mechanisms, possibly involving chemical modifications to DNA or special regulatory proteins, must be responsible for preventing genetic mixing in these special chromosome regions.

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