homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Researchers map and compare the genome of delicious truffles

A most delicious study!

Mihai Andrei
November 12, 2018 @ 6:01 pm

share Share

Truffles are some of the most delicious (and expensive) foods you can eat. Now, researchers have analyzed their genomes to understand the molecular underpinnings of what makes them so special.

Black truffle (Tuber melanosporum).

With about 1.5 million species, fungi represent one of the most diverse branches of life. However, despite their diversity and usefulness, we know surprisingly little about how they interact in natural and synthetic communities. To bridge this gap, a team of researchers has started a large-scale project, called 1000 Fungal Genomes Project. This project will help us better understand how mushrooms really work, and how we can harvest their benefits for agricultural, industrial, and even climate management purposes. Essentially, the project wants to map the genomes of 1,000 important mushroom species, over the course of five years.

Now, a large team led by Francis Martin hassequenced the genomes of the prized Piedmont white truffle and the Burgundy, desert and pig truffles — four of the most prized species.

[panel style=”panel-success” title=”A mushroom is not a mushroom” footer=””]What we typically call “mushroom” is only the above-ground fruiting body of a complex organism that lies mostly underground. Like most mushrooms, truffles are fruiting bodies filled with spores, each spore being capable of sending out a branching filament (hypha) that can develop into a group and form its own mycelium (the vegetative part of a fungus consisting of many branching filaments). So in a way, it doesn’t make sense to say that a fungus is a truffle, but rather that it has or forms a truffle.[/panel]

Truffles rely on animals to eat the fruiting body and spread the spores around — but like a few other mushrooms, they made the mistake of being too delicious to humans. They are highly appreciated for their exquisite flavor and have been cherished since ancient times, although domestication has largely remained impossible.

Martin and colleagues were looking at how truffles first came to be, and found that truffle-forming species evolved independently more than a hundred times in history. They appear in most groups group of fleshy fungi and remarkably, share numerous genetic similarities with each other, even between unrelated species.

For instance, the Piedmont white truffle, the Burgundy, desert and pig truffles all share similarities with another species, called the Périgord black truffle, as well as non-truffle-forming fungi — despite the fact that they branched out over a hundred million years ago.

They also found that truffles have more genes that produce smelly, pungent, volatile organic compounds, which are likely responsible for generating their distinct aroma that attracts animals and makes them so appreciated by humans.

From a genomic point of view, the analyzed truffle-forming species appear quite similar overall, and although the functions of some genes still remains to be uncovered, the study will go a long way towards helping us understand the lifestyle and morphological functions of these  remarkable organisms.

The study has been published in Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-018-0710-4

share Share

Scientists Master the Process For Better Chocolate and It’s Not in the Beans

Researchers finally control the fermentation process that can make or break chocolate.

Most Countries in the World Were Ready for a Historic Plastic Agreement. Oil Giants Killed It

Diplomats from 184 nations packed their bags with no deal and no clear path forward.

Are you really allergic to penicillin? A pharmacist explains why there’s a good chance you’re not − and how you can find out for sure

We could have some good news.

Archaeologists Find 2,000-Year-Old Roman ‘Drug Stash’ Hidden Inside a Bone

Archaeologists have finally proven that Romans used black henbane. But how did they use it?

Astronomers Capture the 'Eye of Sauron' Billions of Light Years Away and It Might Be the Most Powerful Particle Accelerator Ever Found

A distant galaxy’s jet could be the universe’s most extreme particle accelerator.

Scientists Have a Plan to Launch a Chip-Sized, Laser-Powered Spacecraft Toward a Nearby Black Hole and Wait 100 Years for It to Send a Signal Home

One scientist thinks we can see what's really in a black hole.

What Would Happen If Everyone in the World Turned On The Lights At the Same Time?

Power grids could likely handle the surge of demand, but all that light would pollute dark zones nearby.

AI Designs Computer Chips We Can't Understand — But They Work Really Well

Can we trust systems we don’t fully understand?

A Painter Found a 122-Year-Old Message in a Bottle Hidden in a Lighthouse in Tasmania

Hidden for 122 years, a message in a bottle is finally revealed.

These Male Tarantulas Have Developed Huge Sexual Organs to Survive Mating

Size really does matter in tarantula romance.