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  Nematode-trapping fungi eavesdrop on nematode pheromones

Hsueh, Y.-P., Mahanti, P., Schroeder, F., & Sternberg, P. (2013). Nematode-trapping fungi eavesdrop on nematode pheromones. In 27th Fungal Genetics Conference (pp. 56).

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 Creators:
Hsueh, Y-P1, Author                 
Mahanti, P, Author
Schroeder, FC, Author
Sternberg, PW, Author
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 Abstract: The recognition of molecular patterns associated with specific pathogens or food sources is fundamental to ecology and plays a major role in the evolution of predator-prey relationships. Recent studies showed that nematodes produce an evolutionarily highly conserved family of small molecules, the ascarosides, which serve essential functions in regulating nematode development and behavior. Here we show that nematophagous fungi, natural predators of soil-dwelling nematodes, can detect and respond to ascarosides. Nematophagous fungi use specialized trapping devices to catch and consume nematodes, and previous studies demonstrated that most fungal species do not produce traps constitutively but rather initiate trap-formation in response to their prey. We found that ascarosides, which are constitutively secreted by many species of soil-dwelling nematodes, represent a conserved molecular pattern used by nematophagous fungi to detect prey and trigger trap formation. Ascaroside-induced morphogenesis is conserved in several closely related species of nematophagous fungi and occurs only under nutrient-deprived condition. Our results demonstrate that microbial predators eavesdrop on chemical communication among their metazoan prey to regulate morphogenesis, providing a striking example of predator-prey co- evolution. We anticipate that these findings will have broader implications for understanding other inter-kingdom interactions involving nematodes, which are found in almost any ecological niche on Earth.

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 Dates: 2013-03
 Publication Status: Published online
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Title: 27th Fungal Genetics Conference (FGC 2013)
Place of Event: Pacific Grove, CA, USA
Start-/End Date: 2013-03-12 - 2013-03-17

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Title: 27th Fungal Genetics Conference
Source Genre: Proceedings
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Pages: - Volume / Issue: - Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: 56 Identifier: -