Penetrative and non‑penetrative interaction between Laboulbeniales fungi and their arthropod hosts

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Penetrative and non‑penetrative interaction between Laboulbeniales fungi and their arthropod hosts. / Reboleira, Ana Sofia; Moritz, Leif; Santamaria, Sergi; Enghoff, Henrik.

I: Scientific Reports, Bind 11, 22170, 2021.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Reboleira, AS, Moritz, L, Santamaria, S & Enghoff, H 2021, 'Penetrative and non‑penetrative interaction between Laboulbeniales fungi and their arthropod hosts', Scientific Reports, bind 11, 22170. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-01729-x

APA

Reboleira, A. S., Moritz, L., Santamaria, S., & Enghoff, H. (2021). Penetrative and non‑penetrative interaction between Laboulbeniales fungi and their arthropod hosts. Scientific Reports, 11, [22170]. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-01729-x

Vancouver

Reboleira AS, Moritz L, Santamaria S, Enghoff H. Penetrative and non‑penetrative interaction between Laboulbeniales fungi and their arthropod hosts. Scientific Reports. 2021;11. 22170. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-01729-x

Author

Reboleira, Ana Sofia ; Moritz, Leif ; Santamaria, Sergi ; Enghoff, Henrik. / Penetrative and non‑penetrative interaction between Laboulbeniales fungi and their arthropod hosts. I: Scientific Reports. 2021 ; Bind 11.

Bibtex

@article{d1d4ef7558854a98be43c4570d5cf4f9,
title = "Penetrative and non‑penetrative interaction between Laboulbeniales fungi and their arthropod hosts",
abstract = "Laboulbeniales are a highly specialized group of fungi living only on arthropods. They have high ost specificity and spend their entire life-cycle on an arthropod host. Taxonomic characters of Laboulbeniales are based on the architecture of the cells of the parenchymal thallus, i.e. the visible part of the fungus outside the host. The extent of the fungus spreading inside the host—the haustorium—remains largely unknown. The attachment to the arthropod host is fundamental to understand the fungus-animal interaction, but how this truly occurs is unclear. Recent evidences question the strictly parasitic life-style of Laboulbeniales. We used micro-computed tomography (μCT) and 3D reconstructions to visualize, for the first time, the complete structure of Laboulbeniales species in situ on their hosts. We compared the haustoriate species, Arthrorhynchus nycteribiae on an insect host to the non-haustoriate species, Rickia gigas on a millipede host. Our results confirm that some Laboulbeniales species are ectoparasitic and have a haustorial structure that penetrates the host{\textquoteright}s cuticle, while others are ectobionts and are only firmly attached to the host{\textquoteright}s cuticle without penetrating it. The presence and the morphology of the haustorium are important traits for Laboulbeniales evolution, and key factors for future understanding of host dependence and specificity.",
author = "Reboleira, {Ana Sofia} and Leif Moritz and Sergi Santamaria and Henrik Enghoff",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1038/s41598-021-01729-x",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "Scientific Reports",
issn = "2045-2322",
publisher = "nature publishing group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Penetrative and non‑penetrative interaction between Laboulbeniales fungi and their arthropod hosts

AU - Reboleira, Ana Sofia

AU - Moritz, Leif

AU - Santamaria, Sergi

AU - Enghoff, Henrik

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Laboulbeniales are a highly specialized group of fungi living only on arthropods. They have high ost specificity and spend their entire life-cycle on an arthropod host. Taxonomic characters of Laboulbeniales are based on the architecture of the cells of the parenchymal thallus, i.e. the visible part of the fungus outside the host. The extent of the fungus spreading inside the host—the haustorium—remains largely unknown. The attachment to the arthropod host is fundamental to understand the fungus-animal interaction, but how this truly occurs is unclear. Recent evidences question the strictly parasitic life-style of Laboulbeniales. We used micro-computed tomography (μCT) and 3D reconstructions to visualize, for the first time, the complete structure of Laboulbeniales species in situ on their hosts. We compared the haustoriate species, Arthrorhynchus nycteribiae on an insect host to the non-haustoriate species, Rickia gigas on a millipede host. Our results confirm that some Laboulbeniales species are ectoparasitic and have a haustorial structure that penetrates the host’s cuticle, while others are ectobionts and are only firmly attached to the host’s cuticle without penetrating it. The presence and the morphology of the haustorium are important traits for Laboulbeniales evolution, and key factors for future understanding of host dependence and specificity.

AB - Laboulbeniales are a highly specialized group of fungi living only on arthropods. They have high ost specificity and spend their entire life-cycle on an arthropod host. Taxonomic characters of Laboulbeniales are based on the architecture of the cells of the parenchymal thallus, i.e. the visible part of the fungus outside the host. The extent of the fungus spreading inside the host—the haustorium—remains largely unknown. The attachment to the arthropod host is fundamental to understand the fungus-animal interaction, but how this truly occurs is unclear. Recent evidences question the strictly parasitic life-style of Laboulbeniales. We used micro-computed tomography (μCT) and 3D reconstructions to visualize, for the first time, the complete structure of Laboulbeniales species in situ on their hosts. We compared the haustoriate species, Arthrorhynchus nycteribiae on an insect host to the non-haustoriate species, Rickia gigas on a millipede host. Our results confirm that some Laboulbeniales species are ectoparasitic and have a haustorial structure that penetrates the host’s cuticle, while others are ectobionts and are only firmly attached to the host’s cuticle without penetrating it. The presence and the morphology of the haustorium are important traits for Laboulbeniales evolution, and key factors for future understanding of host dependence and specificity.

U2 - 10.1038/s41598-021-01729-x

DO - 10.1038/s41598-021-01729-x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34773061

VL - 11

JO - Scientific Reports

JF - Scientific Reports

SN - 2045-2322

M1 - 22170

ER -

ID: 284703648