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Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp: cap 6 cm in diameter, stem is 5-10 cm tall Facultative tree root pathogen
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Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Overview

Armillaria bulbosa (gallica)• Known as the Humungous Fungus, or

honey mushroom• Form rhizomorphs, which make up

much of the “humungous” part• Basidiocarp: cap 6 cm in diameter,

stem is 5-10 cm tall • Facultative tree root pathogen

Page 2: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Life cycle: Reproduction

• Sexual – Basidiocarps release spores (n)

after karyogamy and meiosis– 2 mating-type loci, each with

multiple alleles in the population– Isolates (n) must have different

alleles at two mating type loci to be sexually compatible

• Asexual – vegetative spreading of

rhizomorph• The large mass of rhizomorph

that is genetically isolated is called a clone

Page 3: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Building up the question…

• “By extending the areas sampled in subsequent years, we were finally able to delimit the large area occupied by this genotype and then go on to show that this genotype likely represents and ‘individual’”

- Myron Smith

Page 4: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Researcher’s Question

• The clonal “individual” is especially difficult to define because the network of hyphae is underground

• How do you unambiguously identify an individual fungi within a local population?

Page 5: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Approach

1. Collect samples

2. Check mating type

- Somatic compatibility test

- Distrubution of mating-type alleles

3. Molecular testing

- RFLP

- RAPD

4. Statistics

5. More testing

Page 6: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Methods and Materials 1

1. Collecting samples• Researcher collected samples over a 30

hectare area by baiting Armillaria with poplar stakes and taking tissues and spores

• They then grew the successfully colonized stakes in soil taken from the study site

• Each fungal colony cultured was called an isolate.

Page 7: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Methods and Materials 2

2. Checking mating type

- Somatic incompatibility

For two fungal isolates to fuse, all somatic compatibility loci must be the same.

Fusion means they’re clones

Example (not Armillaria)

Page 8: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Methods and Materials 2

• 2. Checking mating type

- Distrubution of mating alleles

- Mating occurs only when coupled isolates have different alleles at two unlinked, multiallelic loci: A and B. (They have an incompatibility system)

- If fruit bodies had the same alleles at A and B, and were collected from the same area, they were assumed to be from the same clone

Page 9: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Result 1

• Somatic compatilbilty:– isolates from vegetative mycelium from a

large sampling area fused

• Mating alleles– They had the same mating type

Page 10: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Result 1

• “Clone 1” was found to exceed 500 m in diameter– Used previously

collected mtDNA restriction fragment patterns

Page 11: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Sensitivity of Approach

• Problem: These tests alone are not enough to distinguish a clone from closely related individuals

Page 12: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Why?

• Q: The first two tests were not sensitive enough to tell a clone from a close relative…Why?

• A: Spores from same point source have the same mating-type alleles, but the offspring they produce after inbreeding are genetically distinct.

Page 13: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Methods and Materials 3

3. Molecular Testing

- RFLP analysis at 5 polymorphic, heterozyg. loci of mtDNA from “Clone 1”

- RAPD analysis at 11 loci

Page 14: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

RAPDS vs. RFLPs

• Use 1 short PCR primer

• When it finds match on template at a distance that can be amplified (primer binds twice within 50 to 2000 bp) RAPD amplicon

• Dominant, annoymous

• Total genomic, vs single locus• Use endonuclease to digest

DNA at specific restriction site• Run digest and see how

amplicon was cut• Single locus is co-dominant

Page 15: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Result 2• RFLP

– All 5 loci from Clone 1 were heterozygous and identical (both alleles present at loci: 1,1)

• RAPD – All 11 RAPD products were present in all vegetative

isolates”

Page 16: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Statistical Analysis

• The probability of retaining heterozygosity at each parental locus in an individual produced by mating of sibling monospore isolates…

= 0.0013

• So they were pretty confident that cloning was responsible for their results, not inbreeding

Page 17: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

More testing, just in case

• To be completely confident, they tested:– 1) that nearby Clone 2 was different and lacked

5 of the Clone 1 heterozyg. RAPD fragments,

– 2) more loci, totaling• 20 RAPD fragments

• 27 nuclear DNA RFLP fragments

** all were identical in Clone 1

Page 18: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Sensitivity of RAPDs

• Tested on subset of spores from same basidiocarp

• RAPDs differentiated among full sibs

Page 19: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Conclusions

• Somatic compatibility, mating allele loci, mtDNA, RFLP, and RAPD tests all indicate that a single organism could indeed occupy a 15 hectare area

Page 20: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Conclusions

• The larger individual, Clone 1 was estimated to weigh 9700 kg and be over 1500 years old

Page 21: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Implications

• ?????

• Fungi are one of the oldest and largest organisms on the planet

• Recycle nutrients…very important!• Armillaria bulbosa also a pathogen; its effects

on forest above may be huge as well.

Page 22: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Index of association

Ia= if same alleles are associated too much as opposed to random,

it means sex is not occurring

Association among alleles calculated and compared to

simulated random distribution

Page 23: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Evolution and Population genetics

• Positively selected genes:……• Negatively selected genes……• Neutral genes: normally population genetics

demands loci used are neutral• Loci under balancing selection…..

Page 24: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

RAPDS use short primers but not too short

• Need to scan the genome

• Need to be “readable”

• 10mers do the job (unfortunately annealing temperature is pretty low and a lot of priming errors cause variability in data)

Page 25: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

RAPDS use short primers but not too short

• Need to scan the genome

• Need to be “readable”

• 10mers do the job (unfortunately annealing temperature is pretty low and a lot of priming errors cause variability in data)

Page 26: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

RAPDS can also be obtained with Arbitrary Primed PCR

• Use longer primers

• Use less stringent annealing conditions

• Less variability in results

Page 27: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Result: series of bands that are present or absent (1/0)

Page 28: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:
Page 29: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Root disease center in true fir caused by Root disease center in true fir caused by H. annosumH. annosum

Page 30: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Ponderosa pine Incense cedar

Page 31: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Yosemite Lodge 1975 Root disease centers outlined

Page 32: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

Yosemite Lodge 1997 Root disease centers outlined

Page 33: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:

WORK ON PINES HAD DEMONSTRATED INFECTIONS ARE

MOSTLY ON STUMPS• Use meticulous field work and genetics

information to reconstruct disease from infection to explosion

• On firs/sequoia if the stump theory were also correct we would find a stump within the outline of each genotype

Page 34: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:
Page 35: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:
Page 36: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:
Page 37: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:
Page 38: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp:
Page 39: Overview Armillaria bulbosa (gallica) Known as the Humungous Fungus, or honey mushroom Form rhizomorphs, which make up much of the “humungous” part Basidiocarp: