| Literature DB >> 26839959 |
George Newcombe1, Jason Campbell1,2, David Griffith3,4, Melissa Baynes3, Karen Launchbaugh1, Rosemary Pendleton5.
Abstract
Dung fungi, such as Sordaria fimicola, generally reproduce sexually with ascospores discharged from mammalian dung after passage through herbivores. Their life cycle is thought to be obligate to dung, and thus their ascospores in Quaternary sediments have been interpreted as evidence of past mammalian herbivore activity. Reports of dung fungi as endophytes would seem to challenge the view that they are obligate to dung. However, endophyte status is controversial because surface-sterilization protocols could fail to kill dung fungus ascospores stuck to the plant surface. Thus, we first tested the ability of representative isolates of three common genera of dung fungi to affect plant growth and fecundity given that significant effects on plant fitness could not result from ascospores merely stuck to the plant surface. Isolates of S. fimicola, Preussia sp., and Sporormiella sp. reduced growth and fecundity of two of three populations of Bromus tectorum, the host from which they had been isolated. In further work with S. fimicola we showed that inoculations of roots of B. tectorum led to some colonization of aboveground tissues. The same isolate of S. fimicola reproduced sexually on inoculated host plant tissues as well as in dung after passage through sheep, thus demonstrating a facultative rather than an obligate life cycle. Finally, plants inoculated with S. fimicola were not preferred by sheep; preference had been expected if the fungus were obligate to dung. Overall, these findings make us question the assumption that these fungi are obligate to dung.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26839959 PMCID: PMC4739622 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Fecundity (top row—seeds per plant) and growth (bottom row—grams of dry, aboveground, vegetative biomass per plant) of some populations of Bromus tectorum were significantly reduced by inoculation with representative isolates of three genera of dung fungi (i.e., Preussia, Sordaria, and Sporormiella).
Clear bars: uninoculated controls. Shaded bars: inoculated. K, M, and Z were populations of B. tectorum from seed collected in Kendrick, Idaho, McCroskey, Idaho and Zia, New Mexico, respectively. Fecundity and growth of Zia plants were negatively affected by Preussia CID 34 (P = 0.001 and P = 0.009, respectively) and Sporormiella CID 329 (P = 0.006 and P = 0.029, respectively); fecundity and growth of Kendrick plants were negatively affected by Sordaria fimicola CID 33 (P = 0.001 and P = 0.001, respectively).
Mean comparisons of forage attributes of Sordaria-infected (S+) and uninfected (S-) B. tectorum.
| Crude Protein | Acid Detergent Fiber | Neutral Detergent Fiber | Total Digestible Nutrients | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S+ | S- | S+ | S- | S+ | S- | S+ | S- | |
| 12.00% | 10.94% | 34.44% | 34.53% | 54.63% | 56.13% | 60.00% | 59.63% | |
| 0.46 | 0.61 | 0.67 | 1.00 | 1.24 | 1.32 | 0.38 | 0.32 | |
| 1.39 | -0.07 | -0.83 | 0.75 | |||||
| 0.19 | 0.94 | 0.42 | 0.46 | |||||
Fig 2The sexual state observed both after passage through a sheep, and after infection of a B. tectorum plant.
Ascospores, the products of meiosis, within and outside an ascus of S. fimicola CID 323.
Transit of S. fimicola CID 323 through the gastrointestinal tracts of sheep after dosing with live cells of the fungus via esophogeal tube.
| Hours (from initial dose) | Sheep Subject | Dosing | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| -168 | |||||
| -144 | |||||
| -120 | |||||
| -96 | |||||
| -72 | |||||
| -48 | |||||
| -24 | |||||
| 0 | Dosing | ||||
| 24 | |||||
| 36 | |||||
| 48 | |||||
| 60 | |||||
| 72 | |||||
| 84 | |||||
| 96 | |||||
| 108 | |||||
+, S. fimicola fruiting in dung; -, no fruiting; na, no sample collected.
Fig 3Abundant reproduction on plant tissues.
Mature perithecia of S. fimicola CID 323 on autoclaved, senescent B. tectorum leaf tissue.
Fig 4No preference for plants infected with S. fimicola CID 323 was exhibited by sheep.
Mean daily consumption of Sordaria-inoculated (S+) B. tectorum expressed as the percentage of total consumed when six sheep were presented with equal amounts of S+ and S- (uninoculated, control) material.