fungi

The oldest fungi fossils have been identified in a Belgian museum

Fossils now confirmed to be at least 715 million-year-old fungi could help us understand how they interacted with the earliest plants on Earth




fungi

Fungi's fabulous future in mental health and sustainable materials

These images showcase the incredible ways mushrooms can be used for everything from boosting well-being to fashioning baroque high heels




fungi

Human Serum Albumin Facilitates Heme-Iron Utilization by Fungi

ABSTRACT

A large portion of biological iron is found in the form of an iron-protoporphyrin IX complex, or heme. In the human host environment, which is exceptionally poor in free iron, heme iron, particularly from hemoglobin, constitutes a major source of iron for invading microbial pathogens. Several fungi were shown to utilize free heme, and Candida albicans, a major opportunistic pathogen, is able both to capture free heme and to extract heme from hemoglobin using a network of extracellular hemophores. Human serum albumin (HSA) is the most abundant host heme-scavenging protein. Tight binding of heme by HSA restricts its toxic chemical reactivity and could diminish its availability as an iron source for pathogenic microbes. We found, however, that rather than inhibiting heme utilization, HSA greatly increases availability of heme as an iron source for C. albicans and other fungi. In contrast, hemopexin, a low-abundance but high-affinity heme-scavenging serum protein, does inhibit heme utilization by C. albicans. However, inhibition by hemopexin is mitigated in the presence of HSA. Utilization of albumin-bound heme requires the same hemophore cascade as that which mediates hemoglobin-iron utilization. Accordingly, we found that the C. albicans hemophores are able to extract heme bound to HSA in vitro. Since many common drugs are known to bind to HSA, we tested whether they could interfere with heme-iron utilization. We show that utilization of albumin-bound heme by C. albicans can be inhibited by the anti-inflammatory drugs naproxen and salicylic acid.

IMPORTANCE Heme constitutes a major iron source for microorganisms and particularly for pathogenic microbes; to overcome the iron scarcity in the animal host, many pathogenic bacteria and fungi have developed systems to extract and take up heme from host proteins such as hemoglobin. Microbial heme uptake mechanisms are usually studied using growth media containing free heme or hemoglobin as a sole iron source. However, the animal host contains heme-scavenging proteins that could prevent this uptake. In the human host in particular, the most abundant serum heme-binding protein is albumin. Surprisingly, however, we found that in the case of fungi of the Candida species family, albumin promoted rather than prevented heme utilization. Albumin thus constitutes a human-specific factor that can affect heme-iron utilization and could serve as target for preventing heme-iron utilization by fungal pathogens. As a proof of principle, we identify two drugs that can inhibit albumin-stimulated heme utilization.




fungi

Evaluation of ID Fungi Plates Medium for Identification of Molds by MALDI Biotyper [Mycology]

MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (MS) identification of pathogenic filamentous fungi is often impaired by difficulties in harvesting hyphae embedded in the medium and long extraction protocols. The ID Fungi Plate (IDFP) is a novel culture method developed to address such difficulties and improve the identification of filamentous fungi by MALDI-TOF MS. We cultured 64 strains and 11 clinical samples on IDFP, Sabouraud agar-chloramphenicol (SAB), and ChromID Candida agar (CAN2). We then compared the three media for growth, ease of harvest, amount of material picked, and MALDI-TOF identification scores after either rapid direct transfer (DT) or a long ethanol-acetonitrile (EA) extraction protocol. Antifungal susceptibility testing and microscopic morphology after subculture on SAB and IDFP were also compared for ten molds. Growth rates and morphological aspects were similar for the three media. With IDFP, harvesting of fungal material for the extraction procedure was rapid and easy in 92.4% of cases, whereas it was tedious on SAB or CAN2 in 65.2% and 80.3% of cases, respectively. The proportion of scores above 1.7 (defined as acceptable identification) were comparable for both extraction protocols using IDFP (P = 0.256). Moreover, rates of acceptable identification after DT performed on IDFP (93.9%) were significantly higher than those obtained after EA extraction with SAB (69.7%) or CAN2 (71.2%) (P = <0.001 and P = 0.001, respectively). Morphological aspects and antifungal susceptibility testing were similar between IDFP and SAB. IDFP is a culture plate that facilitates and improves the identification of filamentous fungi, allowing accurate routine identification of molds with MALDI-TOF-MS using a rapid-extraction protocol.




fungi

Magical eco-resin jewelry encapsulates Ireland's wildflowers & fungi

These delightful mementos of the Irish countryside remind us of nature's beauty, but are also responsibly sourced and packaged.




fungi

Fungi can recycle your smartphone battery

The best way to extract all of those valuable metals in old electronics may be to grow some fungus.




fungi

Fungi could help concrete heal its own cracks

Researchers are looking to fungi to help provide a fix for crumbling infrastructure, with promising results.




fungi

Fungi that EATS radiation could be used like a 'sun block' for humans to protect against deadly rays

In 1991, five years after the disaster which rocked Ukraine, the black fungi was found sprouting up the walls of the abandoned reactor which had been flooded with gamma.




fungi

Mysterious Fungi Bring a West Virginia Forest Back to Life

In West Virginia, the Nature Conservancy is bringing back forests with the help of a very special fungus.




fungi

Medicinal plants and fungi: recent advances in research and development / Dinesh Chandra Agrawal, Hsin-Sheng Tsay, Lie-Fen Shyur, Yang-Chang Wu, Sheng-Yang Wang, editors

Online Resource




fungi

[ASAP] <italic toggle="yes">Agrocybe aegerita</italic> Serves As a Gateway for Identifying Sesquiterpene Biosynthetic Enzymes in Higher Fungi

ACS Chemical Biology
DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.0c00155




fungi

Recent advancement in white biotechnology through fungi. Ajar Nath Yadav, Shashank Mishra, Sangram Singh, Arti Gupta, editors

Online Resource




fungi

Recent advancement in white biotechnology through fungi. Ajar Nath Yadav, Sangram Singh, Shashank Mishra, Arti Gupta, editors

Online Resource




fungi

Recent Advancement in White Biotechnology Through Fungi. Ajar Nath Yadav, Sangram Singh, Shashank Mishra, Arti Gupta, editors

Online Resource




fungi

Tracking ancient Rome’s rise using Greenland’s ice, and fighting fungicide resistance

Two thousand years ago, ancient Romans were pumping lead into the air as they smelted ores to make the silvery coin of the realm. Online News Editor David Grimm talks to Sarah Crespi about how the pollution of ice in Greenland from this process provides a detailed 1900-year record of Roman history. This week is also resistance week at Science—where researchers explore the global challenges of antibiotic resistance, pesticide resistance, herbicide resistance, and fungicide resistance. Sarah talks with Sarah Gurr of the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom about her group’s work on the spread of antifungal resistance and what it means for crops and in the clinic. And in a bonus books segment, staff writer Jennifer Couzin-Frankel talks about medicine and fraud in her review of Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup by John Carreyrou. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Listen to previous podcasts. [Image: Wheat rust/Oregon State University; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




fungi

Noongar bush tucker : bush food plants and fungi of the south-west of Western Australia / Vivienne Hansen and John Horsfall

Hansen, Vivienne, author




fungi

[ASAP] Effects of Azole Fungicides on Secreted Metabolomes of <italic toggle="yes">Botrytis cinerea</italic>

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.0c00696




fungi

[ASAP] Novel Fungicide 4-Chlorocinnamaldehyde Thiosemicarbazide (PMDD) Inhibits Laccase and Controls the Causal Agent of Take-All Disease in Wheat, <italic toggle="yes">Gaeumannomyces graminis</italic> var. <italic toggle="ye

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.0c01260




fungi

[ASAP] Synthesis and Antiviral/Fungicidal/Insecticidal Activities Study of Novel Chiral Indole Diketopiperazine Derivatives Containing Acylhydrazone Moiety

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.0c00875




fungi

The identification of fungi : an illustrated introduction with keys, glossary, and guide to literature / Frank M. Dugan

Dugan, Frank M., 1947-




fungi

The triumph of the fungi : a rotten history / Nicholas P. Money

Money, Nicholas P




fungi

Fungi in biogeochemical cycles / edited by Geoffrey Michael Gadd




fungi

The applied genetics of humans, animals, plants and fungi / Bernard C. Lamb

Lamb, Bernard C




fungi

Fungi in the environment / edited by Geoffrey Michael Gadd, Sarah C. Watkinson and Paul S. Dyer




fungi

Introduction to fungi / John Webster and Roland Weber

Webster, John, 1925-




fungi

The fungi of New Zealand = Nga harore o Aotearoa




fungi

The advance of the fungi / by E.C. Large ; with a new introduction by karen-Beth G. Scholthof, Paul D. Peterson, and Clay S. Griffith

Large, E. C. (Ernest Charles)




fungi

Handbook of soil fungi / A. Nagamani, I.K. Kunwar, C. Manoharachary

Nagamani, A




fungi

Fungi from different environments / editors, J.K. Misra, S.K. Deshmukh




fungi

The utility of morphological, ITS molecular and combined datasets in estimating the phylogeny of the cortinarioid sequestrate fungi / by Anthony Francis

Francis, Anthony




fungi

Cellular and molecular biology of filamentous fungi / edited by Katherine A. Borkovich, Daniel J. Ebbole




fungi

Molecular identification of fungi / Youssuf Gherbawy, Kerstin Voigt, editors




fungi

Pictorial atlas of soil and seed fungi : morphologies of cultured fungi and key to species / Tsuneo Watanabe

Watanabe, Tsuneo, 1937-




fungi

A field guide to Australian fungi / Bruce Fuhrer

Fuhrer, B. A. (Bruce Alexander), 1930-




fungi

21st century guidebook to fungi / David Moore, Geoffrey D. Robson, Anthony P. J. Trinci

Moore, D. (David), 1942-




fungi

Bioinformatic genome analysis of the necrotrophic wheat-pathogenic fungus Phaeosphaeria nodorum and related Dothideomycete fungi / James Kyawzwar Hane

Hane, James Kyawzwar




fungi

Introduction to fungi / John Webster

Webster, John, 1925-




fungi

Ainsworth & Bisby's dictionary of the fungi / by P.M. Kirk [and 3 others] ; with the assistance of T.V. Andrianova [and 7 others]

Ainsworth, G. C. (Geoffrey Clough), 1905-1998




fungi

Fungi : a very short introduction / Nicholas P. Money

Money, Nicholas P




fungi

The fungi




fungi

Fungi (Kavanagh)




fungi

[ASAP] Irpexine, an Isoindolinone Alkaloid Produced by Coculture of Endophytic Fungi, <italic toggle="yes">Irpex lacteus</italic> and <italic toggle="yes">Phaeosphaeria oryzae</italic>

Journal of Natural Products
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.0c00047




fungi

Fungi associated with stored wheat grain in Australia : isolation, identification and characterisation / by Eman Barkat

Barkat, Eman, author




fungi

In bed with viruses : the partnership between orchids, fungi and viruses / Jamie Wan Ling Ong

Ong, Jamie Wan Ling, author




fungi

Lesbians stand in front of Fungie's




fungi

Antarctic tunicates and endophytic fungi :




fungi

Wet season macrofungi of the Caribbean slope in Monteverde, Costa Rica




fungi

[Macrofungal abundance and distribution during the wet season in Monteverde, Costa Rica--supporting materials--additions to the database of fungi at the Estacion biologica de Monteverde]




fungi

Tropical pteridophyte relationships with mycorrhizal fungi




fungi

Mycorrhizal fungi in epiphytic and terrestrial Oerstedella exasperata (Orchidaceae)