Finding a compatible mating partner is an essential step in the life cycle
of most sexually reproducing organisms. Fungi have two or more mating types
, and only cells of different mating type combine to produce diploid cells.
In mushrooms, this is taken to extremes, with the occurrence of many thous
ands of mating types. But, having gone to such extraordinary lengths to ens
ure that almost any two mushroom mycelia in the wild can mate, cell fusion
is not followed by nuclear fusion and true diploidy. Instead, the fused cel
ls form a characteristic mycelium, known as the dikaryon, in which haploid
nuclei are paired but actively prevented from fusing. The mating-type genes
, which encode pheromones, pheromone receptors and homeodomain transcriptio
n factors, have crucial roles in regulating the complex developmental progr
amme by which the dikaryon is formed.