M G Roca, J Arlt, C E Jeffree, and N D Read (2005)
Cell biology of conidial anastomosis tubes in Neurospora Crassa
Eukaryotic Cell 4(5):911–919.
Although hyphal fusion has been well documented in mature colonies of
filamentous fungi, it has been little studied during colony
establishment. Here we show that specialized hyphae, called conidial
anastomosis tubes (CATs), are produced by all types of conidia and by
conidial germ tubes of Neurospora crassa. The CAT is shown to be a
cellular element that is morphologically and physiologically distinct
from a germ tube and under separate genetic control. In contrast to
germ tubes, CATs are thinner, shorter, lack branches, exhibit
determinate growth, and home toward each other. Evidence for an
extracellular CAT inducer derived from conidia was obtained because CAT
formation was reduced at low conidial concentrations. A cr-1 mutant
lacking cyclic AMP (cAMP) produced CATs, indicating that the inducer is
not cAMP. Evidence that the transduction of the CAT inducer signal
involves a putative transmembrane protein (HAM-2) and the MAK-2 and
NRC-1 proteins of a mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling pathway
was obtained because ham-2, mak-2, and nrc-1 mutants lacked CATs.
Optical tweezers were used in a novel experimental assay to
micromanipulate whole conidia and germlings to analyze chemoattraction
between CATs during homing. Strains of the same and opposite mating
type were shown to home toward each other. The cr-1 mutant also
underwent normal homing, indicating that cAMP is not the
chemoattractant. ham-2, mak-2, and nrc-1 macroconidia did not attract
CATs of the wild type. Fusion between CATs of opposite mating types was
partially inhibited, providing evidence of non-self-recognition prior
to fusion. Microtubules and nuclei passed through fused CATs.
doi:10.1128/EC.4.5.911919.2005