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Judi Lynn

(160,527 posts)
Fri Jul 26, 2019, 02:20 AM Jul 2019

This is the first fungus known to host complex algae inside its cells


It’s unclear if the newly discovered alliance exists in the wild
BY TINA HESMAN SAEY 12:49PM, JULY 24, 2019



FUNGAL INSIDER In a first, scientists have discovered that the marine algal species Nannochloropsis oceanica (green round cells) can live inside the fungus Mortierella elongata (long transparent tubes). The species formed a mutually beneficial relationship in a lab dish.

Z.-Y. DU ET AL/ELIFE 2019 (CC BY 4.0)

A soil fungus and a marine alga have formed a beautiful friendship.

In a lab dish, scientists grew the fungus Mortierella elongata with a photosynthetic alga called Nannochloropsis oceanica. This odd couple formed a mutually beneficial team that kept each other going when nutrients such as carbon and nitrogen were scarce, researchers report July 16 in eLife.

Surprisingly, after about a month together, the partners got even cozier. Algal cells began growing inside the fungi’s super long cells called hyphae — the first time that scientists have identified a fungus that can harbor eukaryotic algae inside itself. (In eukaryotic cells, DNA is stored in the nucleus.) In lichens, a symbiotic pairing of fungi and algae, the algae remain outside of the fungal cells.

In the new study, biochemist Zhi-Yan Du of Michigan State University in East Lansing and his colleagues used heavy forms of carbon and nitrogen to trace the organisms’ nutrient exchange. The fungi passed more than twice as much nitrogen to their algal partners as the algae sent to the fungi, the team found. And while both partners lent each other carbon, the algal cells had to touch the fungi’s hyphae cells to make their carbon deliveries.

More:
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/first-fungus-known-host-complex-algae-inside-its-cells?utm_source=email&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=latest-newsletter-v2&utm_source=Latest_Headlines&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Latest_Headlines
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