Viral, Fungal, and Plant Symbiosis Confers Heat Tolerance

whitecoast

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
This is an old research paper from 2007, but is still good:

http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/24799/title/An-ecologic-m-nage---trois/

[quote author=Abstract]A virus in a fungus in a plant: This three-way symbiosis was discovered in a tropical panic grass Dichanthelium lanuginosum. Marilyn J. Roossnick of the Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation in Ardmore, Okla., and collaborators were examining an endophytic fungus, Curvularia protuberata, which inhabits the roots of the grass, allowing it to grow in the high-temperature soils of Yellowstone National Park. They isolated a dsRNA virus in the fungus necessary to maintain the high-temperature tolerance.1 Joe Heitman, of Duke University Medical Center calls the paper "fascinating."

In Faculty of 1000, Heitman writes: "Earlier studies have revealed that symbiosis between a fungus and a plant enabled the two to survive growth at temperature extremes as high as 65°C. This study reveals a third partner in this ménage à trois symbiosis, a fungal virus dubbed the Curvularia thermal tolerance virus (CThTV), [which] is necessary for the fungus to confer thermal tolerance.

"Isolates cured of the virus by a freeze/thaw cycle establish symbiosis but do not protect from temperature extremes, whereas reinfection by hyphal anastomosis restores the ability of the symbiont to protect both itself and the plant partner. Remarkably, growth of the fungus on a nonhost plant, tomato, conferred increased heat tolerance. These findings have profound implications for our appreciation of the importance of symbiotic relationships, and likely have practical implications for agriculture."[/quote]

What I find interesting about it is that the inoculation of a virus actually improved an organism's ability to respond and defend against excessive heat. It makes me wonder what other potential symbiotic relationships may be formed between viruses and people, and how they may potentially protect against environmental stresses. Maybe the ones which arrive on comets from space are there to help as well as harm?
 
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