Abstract

In an attempt to get a marker gene suitable for genetical transformation of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Hebeloma cylindrosporum, the gene Hc.Sdh (R) that confers carboxin-resistance was isolated from a UV mutant of this fungus. It encodes a mutant allele of the Fe-S subunit of the succinate dehydrogenase gene that carries a single amino acid substitution known to confer carboxin-resistance. This gene was successfully used as the selective marker to transform, via Agrobacterium tumefaciens, monokaryotic and dikaryotic strains of H. cylindrosporum. We also successfully transformed hygromycin-resistant insertional mutants. Transformation yielded mitotically stable carboxin-resistant mycelia. This procedure produced transformants, the growth of which was not affected by 2 microg l(-1) carboxin, whereas wild-type strains were unable to grow in the presence of 0.1 microg l(-1) of this fungicide. This makes the carboxin-resistance cassette much more discriminating than the hygromycin-resistance one. PCR amplification and Southern blot hybridisation indicated that more than 90% of the tested carboxin-resistant mycelia contained the Hc.Sdh (R) cassette, usually as a single copy. The AGL-1 strain of A. tumefaciens was a much less efficient donor than LBA 1126; the former yielded ca. 0-30% transformation frequency, depending on fungal strain and resistance cassette used, whereas the latter yielded ca. 60-95%.

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