4.7 Article

Comparative Transcriptomics of Flammulina filiformis Suggests a High CO2 Concentration Inhibits Early Pileus Expansion by Decreasing Cell Division Control Pathways

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms20235923

Keywords

winter mushroom; pileus development; carbon dioxide stress; RNA-seq; cell division; ubiquitin-proteasome system; gene expression

Funding

  1. Project of Wood Saprophytic Mushroom Breeding and Industrialization [fjzycxny2017010]
  2. National Project of Joint Research for Breed Improvement [111821301354052291]
  3. Scientific Research Foundation of Graduate School of Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University [YB2016005]
  4. Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University Science and Technology Innovation Fund Project [CXZX2017410]

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Carbon dioxide is commonly used as one of the significant environmental factors to control pileus expansion during mushroom cultivation. However, the pileus expansion mechanism related to CO2 is still unknown. In this study, the young fruiting bodies of a popular commercial mushroom Flammulina filiformis were cultivated under different CO2 concentrations. In comparison to the low CO2 concentration (0.05%), the pileus expansion rates were significantly lower under a high CO2 concentration (5%). Transcriptome data showed that the up-regulated genes enriched in high CO2 concentration treatments mainly associated with metabolism processes indicated that the cell metabolism processes were active under high CO2 conditions. However, the gene ontology (GO) categories and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathways associated with cell division processes contained down-regulated genes at both 12 h and 36 h under a high concentration of CO2. Transcriptome and qRT-PCR analyses demonstrated that a high CO2 concentration had an adverse effect on gene expression of the ubiquitin-proteasome system and cell cycle-yeast pathway, which may decrease the cell division ability and exhibit an inhibitory effect on early pileus expansion. Our research reveals the molecular mechanism of inhibition effects on early pileus expansion by elevated CO2, which could provide a theoretical basis for a CO2 management strategy in mushroom cultivation.

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