4.6 Review Book Chapter

Conflict, Competition, and Cooperation Regulate Social Interactions in Filamentous Fungi

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF MICROBIOLOGY, VOL 74, 2020
Volume 74, Issue -, Pages 693-712

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-micro-012420-080905

Keywords

allorecognition; nonself recognition; cell fusion; hyphal networks; kind recognition; programmed cell death

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation grants [MCB1412411, MCB1818283]
  2. Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory under US Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  3. Fred E. Dickinson Chair of Wood Science and Technology award

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Social cooperation impacts the development and survival of species. In higher taxa, kin recognition occurs via visual, chemical, or tactile cues that dictate cooperative versus competitive interactions. In microbes, the outcome of cooperative versus competitive interactions is conferred by identity at allorecognition loci, so-called kind recognition. In syncytial filamentous fungi, the acquisition of multicellularity is associated with somatic cell fusion within and between colonies. However, such intraspecific cooperation entails risks, as fusion can transmit deleterious genotypes or infectious components that reduce fitness, or give rise to cheaters that can exploit communal goods without contributing to their production. Allorecognition mechanisms in syncytial fungi regulate somatic cell fusion by operating precontact during chemotropic interactions, during cell adherence, and postfusion by triggering programmed cell death reactions. Alleles at fungal allorecognition loci are highly polymorphic, fall into distinct haplogroups, and show evolutionary signatures of balancing selection, similar to allorecognition loci across the tree of life.

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