AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the heat tolerance of mesophilic fungi spores from a tropical semi-arid area in the Western Ghats of southern India, particularly after exposure to high temperatures that mimic dry season fires.
  • Nine out of 25 isolated fungal species showed the ability to grow after being heated at 100°C for 2 hours, with some even surviving temperatures up to 115°C, indicating an unusual level of thermotolerance.
  • The findings suggest that these fungi likely developed adaptations to withstand fires, which could have implications for understanding fungal resilience and the evolution of heat-resistant pathogens in a warming climate.

Article Abstract

This study concerns the thermotolerance of spores of mesophilic fungi isolated from a tropical semi-arid habitat subject to dry season fire in the Western Ghats, southern India. Among 25 species of Ascomycota isolated from leaf litter, nine were able to grow after incubation in a drying oven for 2h at 100°C; the spores of two of these species survived 2h incubation at 110°C, and one survived exposure to 115°C for 2h. The range of thermotolerance among mesophilic fungi isolated from the leaf litter was surprising: filamentous fungi from other habitats, including species that colonize scorched vegetation after fires and thermophilic forms occurring in self-heating plant composts, cannot survive even brief exposure to such high temperatures. It is possible that the exceptional heat resistance of the Indian fungi is related to adaptations to surviving fires. Genetic analysis of the physiological mechanisms of heat resistance in these fungi offers prospects for future biotechnological innovations. The discovery of extreme thermotolerance among common saprotrophs shows that this physiological trait may be more widespread than recognized previously, adding to concern about the evolution of opportunistic pathogens on a warmer planet. The fungi in this study are among the most heat-resistant eukaryotes on record and are referred to here as 'Agni's Fungi', after the Hindu God of Fire.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.funbio.2011.06.011DOI Listing

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